10/26 Yoshi am 452 +3 435 +7 455

I hope Yoshi clears this bounce soon! I agree with Crista that it looks like Yoshi is starting to get a clue since the dental! Now that youre starting to see some blues and greens it will only be a matter of time before Yoshi is used to these lower numbers and will hopefully bounce less and less :)
 
I hope Yoshi clears this bounce soon! I agree with Crista that it looks like Yoshi is starting to get a clue since the dental! Now that youre starting to see some blues and greens it will only be a matter of time before Yoshi is used to these lower numbers and will hopefully bounce less and less :)
Hopefully. He’s wearing red today. :mad:
 
Quoting Sienne and Gabby here: She wrote this on another post: I kept for reference...

Stopping the bouncing: There is no sure way to prevent bouncing. (This is probably the most frequently asked question I run across.) Bouncing is normal, albeit very annoying for caregivers. Part of the issue is that we usually don't know just how long our cats have been diabetic. Their system gets used to being in higher numbers. As they respond to insulin, their body wants to go back to where it's "comfortable." Alternatively, bouncing is a protective mechanism. It's the internal safeguard against hypoglycemia and we don't want it to disappear entirely. The only way that bouncing slows down is for your cat to spend more time in normal numbers. I don't think one method for dosing is preferable when it come to bounces.
 
Quoting Sienne and Gabby here: She wrote this on another post: I kept for reference...

Stopping the bouncing: There is no sure way to prevent bouncing. (This is probably the most frequently asked question I run across.) Bouncing is normal, albeit very annoying for caregivers. Part of the issue is that we usually don't know just how long our cats have been diabetic. Their system gets used to being in higher numbers. As they respond to insulin, their body wants to go back to where it's "comfortable." Alternatively, bouncing is a protective mechanism. It's the internal safeguard against hypoglycemia and we don't want it to disappear entirely. The only way that bouncing slows down is for your cat to spend more time in normal numbers. I don't think one method for dosing is preferable when it come to bounces.
Omg this is like the gospel. Thank you for the link, and thank you @Sienne and Gabby (GA)
 
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