StephL
Member Since 2020
Hello,
We are new here, Hampton was diagnosed in August as diabetic. He started on a pill to manage his diabetes to start off while we moved states, he did ok on this, some improvement in his health but he then got very sick from the stress of the move/improper diabetes control. Once we arrived he was switched to Lantus in September, he was doing really well but our human glucometer malfunctioned and was reporting much lower numbers than he really was so we stopped his insulin for 2 days which resulted in BG of 470 (uneducated humans
....) He went into Ketoacidosis and recovered from that with SubQ fluids, insulin therapy and appetite stimulant around 6 days he was doing much better. After this episode he was receiving Lantus - 1u at night and 1u in morning but this was bringing him very low (30s) so the vet suggested going to 1u in mornings only. At this point I started to read these forums. Since then we have been slowly reducing his insulin and he is now at .25u in mornings but has not received any insulin in two days due to his BG being from 60-80 in the mornings (night time he is sitting 70-90). We are not always home to monitor for hypoglycemia and it scares us for him to drop too low. Hampton the last 2 weeks has been more active, playful, happy, purry, snuggly and just plain joyful than we have seen him in MONTHS! he also eats like a horse now and barely drinks (Which the vet said is good beacuse he is getting most fluids from his wet food and it means his diabetes is in check)
We now use VetMate Glucometer because the human one betrayed us. The VetMate read 40 points lower than the Alphatrac that the vet has. (Which was similar to how our human meter was reading too) So with that being said, we tend to assume he is actually higher than what his glucometer reads. Without an exact science we assume if he reads 60 he really is more like 100.
My questions....
We are terrified for him to go DKA again... are we doing the wrong thing by not giving him his .25 in mornings when he is reading 60-80? If so at what BG numbers do we not administer Lantus? He's acting like he feels so great but we dont want to mess it up.
Is it possible for a cat who has always been slender to go into remission?
Our vet thinks he will never go into remission because he went DKA... Why might she think that?
By Fluctuating insulin doses from .25 to .50 to .25 to none, does that do more harm than good since its not consistency or is it better to tailor shots every morning to BG levels? (we were doing this when his numbers were getting super low but again we just want to know what's best)
Thanks for the help!
Sorry if my lingo isn't right, we are new to this!
Steph
We are new here, Hampton was diagnosed in August as diabetic. He started on a pill to manage his diabetes to start off while we moved states, he did ok on this, some improvement in his health but he then got very sick from the stress of the move/improper diabetes control. Once we arrived he was switched to Lantus in September, he was doing really well but our human glucometer malfunctioned and was reporting much lower numbers than he really was so we stopped his insulin for 2 days which resulted in BG of 470 (uneducated humans
We now use VetMate Glucometer because the human one betrayed us. The VetMate read 40 points lower than the Alphatrac that the vet has. (Which was similar to how our human meter was reading too) So with that being said, we tend to assume he is actually higher than what his glucometer reads. Without an exact science we assume if he reads 60 he really is more like 100.
My questions....
We are terrified for him to go DKA again... are we doing the wrong thing by not giving him his .25 in mornings when he is reading 60-80? If so at what BG numbers do we not administer Lantus? He's acting like he feels so great but we dont want to mess it up.
Is it possible for a cat who has always been slender to go into remission?
Our vet thinks he will never go into remission because he went DKA... Why might she think that?
By Fluctuating insulin doses from .25 to .50 to .25 to none, does that do more harm than good since its not consistency or is it better to tailor shots every morning to BG levels? (we were doing this when his numbers were getting super low but again we just want to know what's best)
Thanks for the help!
Sorry if my lingo isn't right, we are new to this!
Steph

we consider a cat to be in remission after 14 days of no insulin and normal numbers so Hampton is almost there and unlikely not to make it at this point. Yes this does happen and I’m really happy that it’s happened for Hampton. Of course you will have to think carefully before letting a vet give him steroids again and only if it’s absolutely essential, also make sure any new vets know his history.