Ilkka and Tom
Member Since 2010
Great comments... (Hi, Libby!)
In my opinion, Akane's chart reflects a lot of messing around with the dose, popularly known as "dose hopping" (a practice that has to do with the bean more than the cat) and which has consequences of the sort where the metabolism is effected and therefore the data for long term insulin need is corrupted and misleading. I think Akane's chart is a textbook case -- at least the Lev part. For that reason I am not in the lower-the-dose camp, as some of my Levemir mates are.
High numbers are often blamed on rebound... sure .. but I think there is reason to believe that lows in response to a reduced dose are also a form of rebound. As Mami points out, Akane comes back up, and alarmingly so. If that rebound is then interpreted as still too much insulin (whereas it is a response to too little!!), it's a disaster because we are taking a cat on a relatively low dose and figuring out how to undermine its systems.
I am suggesting that low numbers in response to reduction can be an "inverse rebound": caused by the pancreas responding to a reduction by calling on reserve capability and delivering an amount of insulin to handle the sudden shortfall. The bean cuts the dose in half? to a quarter of what it was? Fine, you may see lower bg but it is a mirage: the cat is diabetic and can't be operating in emergency mode all the time. Pretty soon the dose is reluctantly returned to higher levels. Poor cat.
I would say the idea that reducing the dose is a possible solution, is not goofy. What is goofy, and possibly destructive, is falling into the belief that it works in more than a minority of cats. Of course it works from time to time -- in those cases where there is the exact set of complications, such as metabolism issues, that present diabetic symptoms.
But exactly what percentage of cats is that? The disease is diabetes, and the last time I peeked, the cause of this disease was not a surfeit of insulin.
My tuppence, centimes, eurocents, whatever.
So nice to see the familiar names. Best regards to all..
Ilkka
In my opinion, Akane's chart reflects a lot of messing around with the dose, popularly known as "dose hopping" (a practice that has to do with the bean more than the cat) and which has consequences of the sort where the metabolism is effected and therefore the data for long term insulin need is corrupted and misleading. I think Akane's chart is a textbook case -- at least the Lev part. For that reason I am not in the lower-the-dose camp, as some of my Levemir mates are.
High numbers are often blamed on rebound... sure .. but I think there is reason to believe that lows in response to a reduced dose are also a form of rebound. As Mami points out, Akane comes back up, and alarmingly so. If that rebound is then interpreted as still too much insulin (whereas it is a response to too little!!), it's a disaster because we are taking a cat on a relatively low dose and figuring out how to undermine its systems.
I am suggesting that low numbers in response to reduction can be an "inverse rebound": caused by the pancreas responding to a reduction by calling on reserve capability and delivering an amount of insulin to handle the sudden shortfall. The bean cuts the dose in half? to a quarter of what it was? Fine, you may see lower bg but it is a mirage: the cat is diabetic and can't be operating in emergency mode all the time. Pretty soon the dose is reluctantly returned to higher levels. Poor cat.
I would say the idea that reducing the dose is a possible solution, is not goofy. What is goofy, and possibly destructive, is falling into the belief that it works in more than a minority of cats. Of course it works from time to time -- in those cases where there is the exact set of complications, such as metabolism issues, that present diabetic symptoms.
But exactly what percentage of cats is that? The disease is diabetes, and the last time I peeked, the cause of this disease was not a surfeit of insulin.
My tuppence, centimes, eurocents, whatever.
So nice to see the familiar names. Best regards to all..
Ilkka