Did you increase the dose? This can result in a change in the size of the depot and can lead to a temporary adjustment in the amount of insulin available for use. Did you decrease the dose recently? A dose reduction will usually result in a need for less stored insulin. The excess may be released into the bloodstream faster than usual, especially if several dose reductions are done back-to-back.
Thank youI am so very much not an expert, but I was just reading through What Is the Insulin Depot? to try and understand some things, and something that jumped out at me was:
If I'm reading that right, it might mean that sometimes an increase can lead to counterintuitively higher BG numbers during an adjustment period, and a decrease can lead to temporary lower numbers. (I'm still not entirely sure how this relates to "bouncing," except that it's all to do with your cat's body adjusting to change.)
Hopefully someone with more experience can chime in!
Yes we are still trying to figure all this outGoing up after an increase is referred to here as new dose wonkiness. It happens generally on day two and briefly. I dint think that’s what is happening here. You just have not reached a breakthrough dose. What I see is that he’s basically flat as meters dampen vary by about 20% up or down. You actually don’t know how low he’s going at night but I suspect it’s about the same as during the day right now.
Yes i was just coming to link this post to the previous thread!Sorry no one responded to this earlier. I guess this is the reason you skipped tonight's shot?
Did he eat? Any more pukes? What did the puke look like? Was there a long gap between meals? Some cats throw up due to stomach acid build-up if there is a long gap.
The onset of Lantus is typically 2 hours after the shot, so you have that much time to get food into him.
Thank you! He did throw up a bit of bile over night but nothing too substantial.Some cats do a scarf and barf. Eat too fast then throw up. Regardless of why they threw up, wait 20-30 minutes then feed small amounts at a time. Make sure he keeps it down, then feed again.
Even diabetic cats undergoing anaesthesia who cannot eat, can still get a half dose of insulin. Insulin does a lot more in the cat's body that counter the carbs in their food. It's food for cells and the brain. Bear's numbers are high enough that you probably need not have skipped insulin. Since you did skip and you say he's not as hungry, I'd try to get a ketones test when you can.
Thanks wendy, i wasnt able to find any blood test kits in stores, going to have to try our best with the stripsThese meters have been used on cats: Nova Max Plus or Precision Xtra Blood & Ketone or Keto Mojo. The last one is online only I think.