My cat Scooter (8y.o. neutered male brown tabby) was just diagnosed last week with diabetes. I had taken him to the vet a few weeks ago for possible worms...he goes outdoors and hunts, and had dropped a lot of weight since November/ December last year. He had gone from 21 pounds (yes, he WAS overweight!) down to 14 pounds. So, we wormed him and the other cats in the house as well. The vet asked if he had been drinking a lot when I got the worm pills, and I didn't think so. However I started to pay attention and noticed suddenly that he was CONSTANTLY at the dog's water dish, at the cat water dish, in the tub, drinking rainwater...so took him back in and sure enough, blood test showed sugar up in the 300's. He had also dropped another 1/4 pound. The vet has ordered insulin so I am waiting for that to arrive. Today they told me how much Rx pet food would cost, that is not going to happen! I figure all 4 of my cats will have to switch over and I can't pay a hundred bucks a month for cat food. Last year one of my other cats, Romeo, went into renal failure but has been fine ever since without any changes to diet. I recently added canned food for my oldest kitty Thea, she is tiny to start with and was just getting too thin, so she has already started on canned. Scooter tries to break down the bathroom door when I feed her, so I've been giving him just a tablespoon or two of the canned so I can get the bathroom door closed! I guess that worked out, taking dry food off the menu won't be hard since all my cats love it and are not having any troubles with it.
I guess from what I've read so far that the first thing I should do is get a home test kit..any advice on brand and where you can buy it? I'm ok with drawing blood and giving shots (always wanted to be a vet, just went through a lazy stage at a ctirical time and decided 8 years of school was too much! Oh well...), I think my biggest problem will be schedules. We have a big family and are running around quite a bit. Somehow we'll make this work. The canned food I've bought has their crude protein analysis at 10.0% min; crude fiber at 1.5% max. Is fiber what would be considered carbs? Some varieties have rice flour; other varieties don't seem to have any flour or plant products.
thanks for any advice!
I guess from what I've read so far that the first thing I should do is get a home test kit..any advice on brand and where you can buy it? I'm ok with drawing blood and giving shots (always wanted to be a vet, just went through a lazy stage at a ctirical time and decided 8 years of school was too much! Oh well...), I think my biggest problem will be schedules. We have a big family and are running around quite a bit. Somehow we'll make this work. The canned food I've bought has their crude protein analysis at 10.0% min; crude fiber at 1.5% max. Is fiber what would be considered carbs? Some varieties have rice flour; other varieties don't seem to have any flour or plant products.
thanks for any advice!