GraceAndAngie
Member Since 2013
Good evening LL,
The heart on my post is for FDMB and for my new vets. I love my new vets and I have FDMB to thank for helping so much with Angie but also for my own health. I wouldn't have figured out my hypoglycaemia issues without you guys! :YMHUG:
I gave Ang her insulin this morning after all. I had a bad night last night so I stayed home this morning. I should have tested myself last night - I'm sure I was hypoglycaemic but I didn't think of it at the time - sometimes I'm too vague to think about how to make it better. I had white pasta for dinner at a friend's house. I forgot to tell them about my new low GI diet. It was so yummy but clearly not worth breaking my diet in the end! I'm still not doing very well with getting all the tests that I should. I have alarms set for +3 and +4. Sometimes I sleep through or get vague. It seems to be getting better though as I'm getting better control of my blood glucose. When I get a job my doctor is going to refer me to a specialist. I'm still infinitely better now than I was in February prior to working it all out.
I took Angie to the vet this afternoon because she's still been drinking and peeing a lot. She's also spending all her time on my bed and not leaving the bedroom. I just wanted to make sure that this was just because of the new house and not something worrying underneath.
The vets at this clinic are so supportive of home testing and up-to-date with current diabetes research. The vet we saw today follows the research of the Queensland University group. :thumbup When he saw the dose Angie was on he said "researchers are finding that cats can sometimes need a minute dose for an extended period of time before their ready to have that support withdrawn and sometimes they may need a small dose indefinitely". That's infinitely better than my last vet who said that I should increase Angie from 0.1 unit to 1.0 units and hold that for a month prior to testing again. :shock: And moments before that he said how he didn't like how low she was going!!!
The vet took some urine with a needle through her tummy into her bladder. There were no crystals or bacteria. Because I'm a pensioner he didn't send it off for analysis but just did what he could in the clinic. He said that the doxycycline would have killed most UTI bacteria but there are some rare resistant ones and she could have a low grade UTI that would show up in culture but not on his tests.
He didn't repeat the blood work that Angie had in March because her kidney and liver function were good then. He said that change drinking and peeing usually happens dramatically when kidneys get to about 25-30% function and that it would be unlikely for them to go from normal to 25-30% in 4 months without seeing other symptoms. Her urine was only slightly less concentrated than normal but this was to be expected if she's been drinking lots. There was no sugar in her urine. She doesn't have any abdominal pain or lumps. Her kidneys felt fine and didn't hurt when he poked them. He said to keep an eye on her and if there are any new symptoms we will repeat the blood tests and maybe send a urine sample for culture. He said that sometimes diabetics can get in the habit of drinking more and keep it up when they no longer need to but this seems unlikely too as she wasn't left untreated for very long.
confused_cat
So I'm going to keep an eye on her and keep on keeping on.
(this is a long post - sorry!)
Grace
The heart on my post is for FDMB and for my new vets. I love my new vets and I have FDMB to thank for helping so much with Angie but also for my own health. I wouldn't have figured out my hypoglycaemia issues without you guys! :YMHUG:
I gave Ang her insulin this morning after all. I had a bad night last night so I stayed home this morning. I should have tested myself last night - I'm sure I was hypoglycaemic but I didn't think of it at the time - sometimes I'm too vague to think about how to make it better. I had white pasta for dinner at a friend's house. I forgot to tell them about my new low GI diet. It was so yummy but clearly not worth breaking my diet in the end! I'm still not doing very well with getting all the tests that I should. I have alarms set for +3 and +4. Sometimes I sleep through or get vague. It seems to be getting better though as I'm getting better control of my blood glucose. When I get a job my doctor is going to refer me to a specialist. I'm still infinitely better now than I was in February prior to working it all out.
I took Angie to the vet this afternoon because she's still been drinking and peeing a lot. She's also spending all her time on my bed and not leaving the bedroom. I just wanted to make sure that this was just because of the new house and not something worrying underneath.
The vets at this clinic are so supportive of home testing and up-to-date with current diabetes research. The vet we saw today follows the research of the Queensland University group. :thumbup When he saw the dose Angie was on he said "researchers are finding that cats can sometimes need a minute dose for an extended period of time before their ready to have that support withdrawn and sometimes they may need a small dose indefinitely". That's infinitely better than my last vet who said that I should increase Angie from 0.1 unit to 1.0 units and hold that for a month prior to testing again. :shock: And moments before that he said how he didn't like how low she was going!!!
The vet took some urine with a needle through her tummy into her bladder. There were no crystals or bacteria. Because I'm a pensioner he didn't send it off for analysis but just did what he could in the clinic. He said that the doxycycline would have killed most UTI bacteria but there are some rare resistant ones and she could have a low grade UTI that would show up in culture but not on his tests.
He didn't repeat the blood work that Angie had in March because her kidney and liver function were good then. He said that change drinking and peeing usually happens dramatically when kidneys get to about 25-30% function and that it would be unlikely for them to go from normal to 25-30% in 4 months without seeing other symptoms. Her urine was only slightly less concentrated than normal but this was to be expected if she's been drinking lots. There was no sugar in her urine. She doesn't have any abdominal pain or lumps. Her kidneys felt fine and didn't hurt when he poked them. He said to keep an eye on her and if there are any new symptoms we will repeat the blood tests and maybe send a urine sample for culture. He said that sometimes diabetics can get in the habit of drinking more and keep it up when they no longer need to but this seems unlikely too as she wasn't left untreated for very long.
confused_cat
So I'm going to keep an eye on her and keep on keeping on.
(this is a long post - sorry!)
Grace