Alex&Fayaway
Member Since 2015
It's hard to answer that question with an absolute. I'll be honest that it was a discussion my husband and I had several times. Cobb is a high dose cat. We got to 31 units twice a day before we switched insulins and really saw progress. If we had known the expense and frustration, I think my husband would have been more vocal about letting Cobb go, but Cobb was my cat so my husband has already said I have to make that decision.
We discussed letting Cobb go when he was first diagnosed because we were uncertain of his future quality of life. We agreed to give it 6 months. Cobb was not doing well at the end of 6 months. DH and I talked, I researched and found FDMB and told him I wanted to give Cobb a little more time. I learned a ton...ie. Cobb was still on "diabetic" dry food. We took him off that and his numbers fell from the 500s into the 300s. That's when we decided these ladies really knew what they were talking about.
If I thought Cobb's quality of life had no chance of improving or that he was in untreatable pain, it would have been no question. My DH did a lot of research and found some cats go into remission. That gave us the hope we needed to jump in with treatment. And from my time here, we celebrate a cat going OTJ a few times a month. Will Fay? I don't know. But I'd guess others whose cats were on insulin for a prolonged period of time felt they never would either.
Unless you run every test when you get that FD diagnosis, which for most would be a waste of money, you can't make that kind of decision because you aren't working with all the information. You have to decide...can I treat the disease I know he has. For us, initially, the answer was "we'll try." And we were given enough hope along the way to continue trying. I would have never guessed Cobb would require so much insulin. But our work has paid off and I feel comfortable with what we've done. We did draw the line at testing for acromegaly. I felt like, if he had it and if I knew, I would pursue every option to treat it or feel guilty. We weren't in a position to treat it, so I felt better off not knowing.
That's just our experience. Everyone has their own!
~Suzanne
I hear you. I feel pretty clear that I can't put any more money towards serious diagnostics. It just isn't worth it...to me. I would never judge anyone here for doing all the workups they wanted. But I think to myself: will the tests change what I'm doing now? How far would I take it? Well, I wouldn't. I'm OK to manage the insulin and diet and work towards testing more often. Other conditions or challenges? Well, if I have to let Fay go, maybe that just means it was her time and some room is made for another rescue to be spared. Who knows.

