My thought is that maybe the .4 last nite was not quite enough. But I'm not sure that warrants changing the dose this morning. I would stick with .6 just because you know it will give you a shootable pmps. I didn't check your ss...I'll go look to see how .8 affects bud.
Edit: you've shot .75 on you similarly high numbers before and Bud was just barely shootable at his pmps. I don't think I'd go any higher than a fat .6 or .7. But that's just my opinion, and I'm not usually in the business of dose advising.
I was afraid you would see higher numbers from the steep drop she got yesterday, her liver panicked and dumped sugar to protect her.
I would stick with .6u for this morning. The bounce will clear in a few cycles and then I would drop back to .4u or .5u to get a more gentle curve and get her PS's even again.
Oooh- I like robin's answer better. I hadn't considered that steep drop yesterday as being the cause of his high amps, but it makes perfect sense now. I should've remembered that- I was told many times never to shoot a bounce cuz it'll clear on it's own.
I'm not sure it was too high, because she ( do i remember you saying that bud is a girl?) didn't drop too low...she just dropped so steeply that it made her liver panic. So a slightly lower dose like robin suggested will make for a gentler curve which may help her liver not to panic.
If I understand this correctly, you would be lowering the dose, not because of the absolute numbers you got, but because the speed of the drop creates problems--the resulting zoom upward. So you want to slow down the rateof the drop.
I hope you're correct, Judy, cuz that's the way I understand it.
Yes, Claudia... Bud's a girl! Daughter found her when she was 7 and said "Bud" was her 'buddy'... so, she was Buddy and then Bud Bud ... we actually call her Bud Bud..
Sorry, SHE. lol I do know Bud's a girl, but with that name it's hard for me to remember! I should tho, I once had a female cat named Steve. I was an obstinate child...
Lactulose [Rx and my preferred] or Mirilax [OTC - and most others prefer] are the answers for that problem if you got it.
Though I have not personally seen a cat with gas have wonky numbers from it I could imagine that could cause pain too. Back when I was a kid on the farm there was this barn kitten that had a big stiff tummy and when you lightly squeezed it it would release it's flatulence. I'm guessing this was because as I remember it was fed milk. Anyway the stiff tummy made me think of that.
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