JessK&Callie
Member Since 2024
Hello everyone - I hope you are all doing well tonight.
My name is Jessica, and my cats name is Callie. She is a beautiful female Calico cat, a rescue that came to live with me in 2011. Now, she lives with myself and her furdad, Daniel. When I adopted her in 2011, they estimated she was around 2, 2.5, so she could possibly be 16 this year. She's been healthy up until a few months ago when she had a bit of an upper respiratory issue (a cold).
About 1.5 weeks ago, we noticed Callie seemed to be urinating more (in the box, thankfully). We also noticed she was more vocal - she's vocal anyway, but she started howling at all hours. Along with the increase in urination, we noticed that her urine was starting to clump in the non-clumping litter (Fresh Step), which was definitely odd. She also started spending more time alone - in our closet (in a pile of my sweaters) and under our bed (on a cat bed). Those two places aren't abnormal for her, they are comfy and warm and dark, but she typically spends the day with me (I work from home FT), and then later on in the day she'll seek another spot.
We took her to the vet on Mon, 4/15. They did a full senior panel including bloodwork and urine. They called Tuesday and said she 'decided to be diabetic'. They gave us the option of the insulin shots or the pill/liquid, and the pill would have been ideal, but they said they'd never used it before on any pets and we were the first they were even telling about it. I didn't want her to be their guinea pig, so we went with the insulin shots. For now, they have her on '1 unit' of Lantus Solostar every 12 hours. This is just to start, as she goes in Friday, 4/26 for her BG curve test.
I thought adapting to giving her the shots would be the worst of it, but it's not. To be fair, my husband has been the one injecting her, I have been holding her and giving her a treat before or after, while he gives her the shot. She seems to take it well, but then runs into the other room and goes to the closet or under the bed. Our vet hasn't been terribly helpful or forthcoming with information unless I ask, and when I do ask, he seems to say one thing while the message boards say another. I am contemplating a new vet, but I'm trying to keep this as low stress as I can for Callie. We are completely overwhelmed with information. At first I thought ok, we give her the shots, great....but then learned about the diet change, and then read about that and how that impacts the amount of insulin she gets.....and that lead to learning about home testing, and it seems to be a never ending list of pieces that need to fall into place perfectly in order to help our cat live a long and healthy life.
We have honey in the house and we have a Glucometer on the way. We've left her food the same because we aren't sure yet how best to do the changeover in the safest way, especially before the Glucometer arrives. I'm not sure if we should wait until she has the BG Curve Test since her insulin dose may change.
Naturally, this has all been very stressful, and for me, the worst part is her not being attached to my side and snuggly. In addition, I'm trying not to blame myself for feeding her dry food for her entire life and anything else that could have caused her diabetes. I know logically that she doesn't actually hate me and that it's just an adjustment period, but I think I need some reassurance that she'll come around.
If you read this far, thank you! I would love to hear any and all suggestions, recommendations, and words of advice you have for us newbies who are overwhelmed, terrified, and will do whatever possible to help our girl be happy and healthy.
Thank you!
My name is Jessica, and my cats name is Callie. She is a beautiful female Calico cat, a rescue that came to live with me in 2011. Now, she lives with myself and her furdad, Daniel. When I adopted her in 2011, they estimated she was around 2, 2.5, so she could possibly be 16 this year. She's been healthy up until a few months ago when she had a bit of an upper respiratory issue (a cold).
About 1.5 weeks ago, we noticed Callie seemed to be urinating more (in the box, thankfully). We also noticed she was more vocal - she's vocal anyway, but she started howling at all hours. Along with the increase in urination, we noticed that her urine was starting to clump in the non-clumping litter (Fresh Step), which was definitely odd. She also started spending more time alone - in our closet (in a pile of my sweaters) and under our bed (on a cat bed). Those two places aren't abnormal for her, they are comfy and warm and dark, but she typically spends the day with me (I work from home FT), and then later on in the day she'll seek another spot.
We took her to the vet on Mon, 4/15. They did a full senior panel including bloodwork and urine. They called Tuesday and said she 'decided to be diabetic'. They gave us the option of the insulin shots or the pill/liquid, and the pill would have been ideal, but they said they'd never used it before on any pets and we were the first they were even telling about it. I didn't want her to be their guinea pig, so we went with the insulin shots. For now, they have her on '1 unit' of Lantus Solostar every 12 hours. This is just to start, as she goes in Friday, 4/26 for her BG curve test.
I thought adapting to giving her the shots would be the worst of it, but it's not. To be fair, my husband has been the one injecting her, I have been holding her and giving her a treat before or after, while he gives her the shot. She seems to take it well, but then runs into the other room and goes to the closet or under the bed. Our vet hasn't been terribly helpful or forthcoming with information unless I ask, and when I do ask, he seems to say one thing while the message boards say another. I am contemplating a new vet, but I'm trying to keep this as low stress as I can for Callie. We are completely overwhelmed with information. At first I thought ok, we give her the shots, great....but then learned about the diet change, and then read about that and how that impacts the amount of insulin she gets.....and that lead to learning about home testing, and it seems to be a never ending list of pieces that need to fall into place perfectly in order to help our cat live a long and healthy life.
We have honey in the house and we have a Glucometer on the way. We've left her food the same because we aren't sure yet how best to do the changeover in the safest way, especially before the Glucometer arrives. I'm not sure if we should wait until she has the BG Curve Test since her insulin dose may change.
Naturally, this has all been very stressful, and for me, the worst part is her not being attached to my side and snuggly. In addition, I'm trying not to blame myself for feeding her dry food for her entire life and anything else that could have caused her diabetes. I know logically that she doesn't actually hate me and that it's just an adjustment period, but I think I need some reassurance that she'll come around.
If you read this far, thank you! I would love to hear any and all suggestions, recommendations, and words of advice you have for us newbies who are overwhelmed, terrified, and will do whatever possible to help our girl be happy and healthy.
Thank you!