jillnc1
Member Since 2022
My cat Mac's BG numbers are up. At remission and for almost 2 years after, his BG was around 70-90, both at home test and semi-annual blood labs at Vet. He was only diabetic for about 6 weeks while I weaned him off of prednisolone. Last week he went in for his usual 6 mo visit. I had not taken a home test since his last set of labs in Dec assuming all was well. At this visit his glucose was 140 and the test lab nor vet highlighted it since it fell within the range. i tend to look over those labs with a fine tooth comb and noticed significant increase in glucose from 6 mos. ago. I then took his BG reading at home and it was 234. Since then it has ranged from 135-190. No clinical symptoms such as thirsty, frequent urination, or inappetence.
Weight is the same. No change in diet. still on Raw Venison, with a few tubes of tuna a day. The only thing that had changed was a big dose of Gabapentin (100 mg) before the office visit and I had started increasing it twice a day (25MB twice a day, taking it for anxiety and arthritis pain). So currently I have backed off the gabapentin. His glucose numbers have not normalized but they are not in the 200's anymore.
I was wondering if due to his age, a history of pancreatitis 2 years ago (those numbers are good now), is there a potential the pancreas has been compromised and he is not producing as much insulin now. The vet says they don't treat until it gets over 250. So at this point I am monitoring it, hoping my gabapentin theory is correct, but I am not super optimistic on that.
Any other theories or experience that might explain why this increase?
Thanks, Jill
Weight is the same. No change in diet. still on Raw Venison, with a few tubes of tuna a day. The only thing that had changed was a big dose of Gabapentin (100 mg) before the office visit and I had started increasing it twice a day (25MB twice a day, taking it for anxiety and arthritis pain). So currently I have backed off the gabapentin. His glucose numbers have not normalized but they are not in the 200's anymore.
I was wondering if due to his age, a history of pancreatitis 2 years ago (those numbers are good now), is there a potential the pancreas has been compromised and he is not producing as much insulin now. The vet says they don't treat until it gets over 250. So at this point I am monitoring it, hoping my gabapentin theory is correct, but I am not super optimistic on that.
Any other theories or experience that might explain why this increase?
Thanks, Jill
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