UrbanUtah
New Member
Our beautiful 13-year-old Maine Coon male named Mac was diagnosed with feline diabetes on July 9th of this year. The diagnosis was confirmed with a fructosamine blood test. Mac had been exhibiting what looked like neurological issues for several weeks, but he has arthritis so we thought he was just “aging.” He started walking on his ankles, which was odd. He was eating well, drinking normal and urinating normally so we didn’t think it was serious. He began to decline and was having more trouble walking and when he walked, he walked in an S shape and he sat down to rest frequently. We took him to the vet who suspected diabetes and they ran a battery of tests and did x-rays to the tune of $500. His test results came back the following week. He was prescribed insulin, 3 units once per day following a “good meal.” I had this nagging feeling about the insulin treatment and I wanted to better understand this disease in felines and did not want to give him insulin without testing his blood at home in a non-stressed environment before administering anything they could potentially put him into hypoglycemic shock. I stumbled on your website that night and read for hours. I immediately got up and removed the dry food bowl. We were already feeding only grain-free wet food morning and night, but Mac really liked his dry food in between his wet food breakfast and dinner and late at night. As a replacement, I popped a whole fryer chicken in my pressure cooker and cooked it for 40 minutes with a natural release and allowed it to cool. I put it in the refrigerator and the next morning I de-boned it and ran it through my food processor, turning it into “chicken crumble,” which I packed up and stored in the fridge & freezer. Mac generally would eat his kibble midday and again late in the evening, and often through the night. He is a little overweight, although he is a large breed cat. In the afternoon when he would wander out meowing I would give him three heaping teaspoons of the ground chicken mixed with hot water. He devoured it! Again, when he wandered out later in the evening, as I was going to bed, I loaded his food bowl with four heaping teaspoons of ground chicken to last him through the night. He really didn’t seem to miss the kibble at all. I went on Amazon and bought a iPetPro glucose tester kit for $99 (don’t waste your money they’re garbage). I also ordered the U40 syringes I would need to administer his insulin, which I had not given him yet. I decided to keep an eye on him and had eliminated the only source of carbs he was really getting until I could test his glucose levels. My husband happened to have a Freestyle Lite glucose tester because he “was” pre-diabetic and was monitoring his blood sugar so when the iPetPro monitor showed up we tested Mac’s blood with both monitors 2-4 hours after he had eaten breakfast ever day. After 10 days of tracking and logging I averaged the results. What we noticed was that the Freestyle Lite monitor was far more consistent than the iPetPro tester, however, the Freestyle Lite was reading on average 43 to 48 points below the iPetPro monitor. We decided to stick with the Freestyle Lite tester and monitor because of its consistent readings and the lancet pen was far superior. I added 50 points to whatever the monitor reading was to ensure that Mac remained within normal feline glucose ranges. It is now the end of August, Mac never had a single dose of insulin, eliminating his dry food immediately and replacing it with home-cooked unseasoned chicken, keeping him on his assorted grain-free pate canned food AM/PM stabilized his glucose and reversed his diabetes. It has taken the better part of two months, but he is no longer walking on his ankles. He’s far more stable overall, not walking in an “S” formation and getting around much better. We test him once a week now and we have a fructosamine test done at the vet every 30 days until he reaches 90 days with stable glucose. The last test he had was within normal range. His coat looks better than it has in years. What I read and the actions I took as a result of reading for hours on this website saved my cat. He is actually healthier today than he was before he had diabetes and his sister has lost 1.5lbs and looks great too! I had no idea how detrimental dry cat food was. I’ve owned cats my entire life and they have all eaten dry food in addition to canned food (although I did switch to grain free canned food many years ago as I am aware cats are carnivorous). I will never feed dry food again. Thank you, thank you, thank you!
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