Is it really necessary for me to have them do a check on him?
What are they going to check?
I guess I will see how he does through the week. I'm curious how many of you use the vet to do an occasional curve?
I estimate, less than 10% of us have curves done at the vet. Two reasons. 1. Accuracy of the numbers, stress induced highs and 2. cost is outrageous for what is done vs cost for us to do this at home.
Since vets charge somewhere between $100 and $200 for a curve at the vets office, most of us that home test say no thanks and do them ourselves at home for the price of 6 strips and some of our time. You test every 2 hours, starting with your pre-shot test and ending with your next pre-shot test. That's a curve.
Curves done in a familiar home environment reflect the actual BG numbers better. You do not have the stress of the ride to the vet raising the numbers, you do not have the scary dogs and strange people at the vet to cause more stress and raise the numbers. You do not have your cat puking all over the car because they get car sick. Curves done at home give you a better idea of the nadir and that is what dosing changes are based on for Lantus and Levimir.
New people tend to have a curve done at the vet if they are not comfortable doing it themselves or have not gotten the hang of home testing.
I had one curve done at the vet office and that was under protest. My sugardude Wink is a foster kitty, so the shelter insisted on a curve even though I had lots of data and had just done a curve myself at home. They would not accept that data and insisted on a curve at the vets. I told them I could do one at home for $2.16. Nope, they insisted on my taking Wink to the vet and spending $120 on a curve at the vet. Their money, their choice since Wink still belongs to them and not me.
Most of us do not spend the money on Fructosamine tests either, since we have more accurate real time data on what the BG's are doing.