Hi all,
We've got a 5 year old cat who was diagnosed a year ago. After the massive stress involved in learning how to test glucose (that was a fun week...), getting her to eat again (greatest feeling in the world), working through glucose curves, and finally finding the perfect dosage of insulin, we got her to an incredibly stable glucose range of 150 highs and 50 lows. She was perfectly fine for the rest of the year and was back to her old amazing self the entire time. We felt great, confident, and closer than ever to her.
Then we went on vacation for a week and a half, boarding her at the vet. She came home missing a claw and was slightly less cuddly, but we didn't think much of it since we knew she needed to get comfortable again after that week and a half.
A week later, we went on another trip and boarded her at a local cat specialist with incredibly great reviews. A couple days into our trip, we got the call... She was vomiting and dropped significantly in temperature. They moved her to a 24-hour care vet, and she went into shock. After stabilizing her, they determined it was a DKA along with Pancreatitis. Her glucose levels were in the 500s. They couldn't figure out what the cause was since their tests showed we were perfectly regulating her insulin and glucose levels at home.
Since then she has stopped eating completely, she barely moves at all the entire day. We'll place her somewhere comfortable to feed or medicate her, and she'll simply curl up at that spot and not move for at least 3 hours. We're now syringe feeding her which she hates, and we're dreading the possibility she'll need a feeding tube installed. We also have IV fluids with B Vitamins and Potassium, Anti-Nausea medication, a long acting Antibiotic, and Mirtazapine to spur appetite. None of it seems to be making any difference except the Anti-Nausea medication which has at least stopped the vomiting after syringe feeding.
I work from home, so I've been able to take care of her while my better half is out during the day. The problem is that I'm spending nearly my entire day worrying about, caring for, and cleaning her (syringe feeding an unhappy cat is ridiculously messier than expected). I don't mind it at all, but I'm having an increasingly harder time focusing on work when I'm constantly shifting focus back to her every hour or so.
We're unbelievably exhausted, terrified that we won't be able to get her back to her old self, and are constantly reassured by the Vet that she'll get better despite her not showing literally any signs of improvement in an entire week. We were recommended this site given how supportive the community is, and we're really struggling here. If we could just get her to eat... Literally anything nutritional... it would make all the difference in the world. She won't even touch her treats, her favorite food, or even deli meat (which she would normally go insane over despite us never giving her more than a fingertip sized minibite once a month). We're scared that the more we syringe feed her, the less likely she'll be to ever actually eat again herself.
I posted this in the introduction forum, but it was recommended I repost here. We appreciate any advice and support you can provide, since we know there are many of you who understand exactly where we're at.
We've got a 5 year old cat who was diagnosed a year ago. After the massive stress involved in learning how to test glucose (that was a fun week...), getting her to eat again (greatest feeling in the world), working through glucose curves, and finally finding the perfect dosage of insulin, we got her to an incredibly stable glucose range of 150 highs and 50 lows. She was perfectly fine for the rest of the year and was back to her old amazing self the entire time. We felt great, confident, and closer than ever to her.
Then we went on vacation for a week and a half, boarding her at the vet. She came home missing a claw and was slightly less cuddly, but we didn't think much of it since we knew she needed to get comfortable again after that week and a half.
A week later, we went on another trip and boarded her at a local cat specialist with incredibly great reviews. A couple days into our trip, we got the call... She was vomiting and dropped significantly in temperature. They moved her to a 24-hour care vet, and she went into shock. After stabilizing her, they determined it was a DKA along with Pancreatitis. Her glucose levels were in the 500s. They couldn't figure out what the cause was since their tests showed we were perfectly regulating her insulin and glucose levels at home.
Since then she has stopped eating completely, she barely moves at all the entire day. We'll place her somewhere comfortable to feed or medicate her, and she'll simply curl up at that spot and not move for at least 3 hours. We're now syringe feeding her which she hates, and we're dreading the possibility she'll need a feeding tube installed. We also have IV fluids with B Vitamins and Potassium, Anti-Nausea medication, a long acting Antibiotic, and Mirtazapine to spur appetite. None of it seems to be making any difference except the Anti-Nausea medication which has at least stopped the vomiting after syringe feeding.
I work from home, so I've been able to take care of her while my better half is out during the day. The problem is that I'm spending nearly my entire day worrying about, caring for, and cleaning her (syringe feeding an unhappy cat is ridiculously messier than expected). I don't mind it at all, but I'm having an increasingly harder time focusing on work when I'm constantly shifting focus back to her every hour or so.
We're unbelievably exhausted, terrified that we won't be able to get her back to her old self, and are constantly reassured by the Vet that she'll get better despite her not showing literally any signs of improvement in an entire week. We were recommended this site given how supportive the community is, and we're really struggling here. If we could just get her to eat... Literally anything nutritional... it would make all the difference in the world. She won't even touch her treats, her favorite food, or even deli meat (which she would normally go insane over despite us never giving her more than a fingertip sized minibite once a month). We're scared that the more we syringe feed her, the less likely she'll be to ever actually eat again herself.
I posted this in the introduction forum, but it was recommended I repost here. We appreciate any advice and support you can provide, since we know there are many of you who understand exactly where we're at.