Jayneorrain
Member Since 2024
Hello, I'm Jayne and I have a diabetic cat, Phileas. He is 15ish years old and was diagnosed with diabetes in January 2023. It has been a brutal year and a half, and I'm hoping you have some advice.
Phileas HATES his insulin shots. Our vet has been extremely judgemental that his diabetes is so poorly managed, but I don't know what to do. He currently "gets" 6 units of the lantus solostar pen two times daily and but his glucose levels are still way too high and his diabetic neuropathy is getting worse.
The problem is that it's nearly impossible to give him the shot. He's started scratching and biting when I even approach with the needle. I'd say he probably only gets the correct dose half of the time, and it's not uncommon for him to flail so much that he rips the needle out of his skin. It's extra hard because I'm a petite person so I cannot physically hold him with one arm, reach that arm around to pick up the skin (which is how my husband does it on nights he won't sit). He needs to either sit for the insulin, which is increasingly rare, or I have to full body pin him. My husband works out of town a full 50% of the time. I feel like a failure of a cat mom. I know he's sick because he's not getting his insulin. I just don't know how to get it to him. I've tried to ask my vet for advice, but they just tell me that he will get used to it. It's been a year and a half. He is getting the opposite of used to it. Do you have any tricks for getting cats to sit for insulin? Are there cats who simply never adjust?
Phileas has always been a high anxiety cat. He has always been a daddy's boy who gets upset when my husband is away. Now, I'm dealing with that while trying to give him a shot.
Phileas HATES his insulin shots. Our vet has been extremely judgemental that his diabetes is so poorly managed, but I don't know what to do. He currently "gets" 6 units of the lantus solostar pen two times daily and but his glucose levels are still way too high and his diabetic neuropathy is getting worse.
The problem is that it's nearly impossible to give him the shot. He's started scratching and biting when I even approach with the needle. I'd say he probably only gets the correct dose half of the time, and it's not uncommon for him to flail so much that he rips the needle out of his skin. It's extra hard because I'm a petite person so I cannot physically hold him with one arm, reach that arm around to pick up the skin (which is how my husband does it on nights he won't sit). He needs to either sit for the insulin, which is increasingly rare, or I have to full body pin him. My husband works out of town a full 50% of the time. I feel like a failure of a cat mom. I know he's sick because he's not getting his insulin. I just don't know how to get it to him. I've tried to ask my vet for advice, but they just tell me that he will get used to it. It's been a year and a half. He is getting the opposite of used to it. Do you have any tricks for getting cats to sit for insulin? Are there cats who simply never adjust?
Phileas has always been a high anxiety cat. He has always been a daddy's boy who gets upset when my husband is away. Now, I'm dealing with that while trying to give him a shot.