MommaOfMuse
Member Since 2010
Since I know you've all heard me harp on watching your meter's averages as much as you watch the individual numbers to get the complete picture of how your cats are doing. So I thought I would start listing Autumn and Casey's 7 day averages.
As of 7a.m. cst the 7day averages are:
Autumn - 170
Casey - 157
Why are averages important? I use them to give me an overall picture of how my cats are doing. What the above averages tell me is despite them both having their turns wearing the pink tutu of shame that the majority of the time in the last 7 days both have been in the mid to high 100s. Both have room for improvement but overall they are regulated just not Tightly Regulated. As long as those averages continue to come down I'm leaving the dose alone.
If the average flatlines then I run a curve and tweak the dose. Ideally I would love to see both averages to eventually start running in the normal range. Then they would be Tightly Regulated. However with long term diabetics that can be difficult to achieve even in humans.
Mel and The Fur Gang
As of 7a.m. cst the 7day averages are:
Autumn - 170
Casey - 157
Why are averages important? I use them to give me an overall picture of how my cats are doing. What the above averages tell me is despite them both having their turns wearing the pink tutu of shame that the majority of the time in the last 7 days both have been in the mid to high 100s. Both have room for improvement but overall they are regulated just not Tightly Regulated. As long as those averages continue to come down I'm leaving the dose alone.
If the average flatlines then I run a curve and tweak the dose. Ideally I would love to see both averages to eventually start running in the normal range. Then they would be Tightly Regulated. However with long term diabetics that can be difficult to achieve even in humans.
Mel and The Fur Gang