Such a lot of useful information - thank you all. Oh and Phlika please don't worry about panicking - I'd much rather have too much help than not enough and I was completely freaked out when the shot seemed to work so fast that she'd be massively hypo by this morning if it carried on dropping her levels all night!
Rosa, I'm happy to report, had a really good night. She didn't eat too much of the dry food in the end - it seems she just wanted a snack! I didn't put any honey on it as I didn't want to go too far the other way and overload the sugar. And she always did love the Royal Canin SO. I know it's horribly high in carbs, but I reckoned better safe than sorry this time around. I think the MD is most likely a massive reduction in carbs over that. What I wasn't aware of until the vet called me back last night with the blood results was that the MD wasn't actually their recommendation. They'd told me they were going to ask the dietitian, but it turns out the dietitian they use works for Hills Science. No surprise then that they recommended MD. They were planning to call them back to find out if it needed to change as her BUN level was a bit high. Of course now I'm wondering if a low-phos, low-carb over the counter brand would fix that one too!
The vet says her ideal weight would be between 10 and 11 lb (or around 4.5-5kg), so aiming for 10 that would definitely still make her initial dose closer to 1 unit than 2 using the 0.25 dosing protocol. That's what I'm going with this morning as I haven't had a chance to get to Walmart just yet - I didn't get a lot of sleep at all last night though I know that will improve once I know she's properly regulated. She insisted on sleeping under the bed not on it (typical cat when you want to keep an eye on them) so I had to keep getting out of bed to check she was OK. I'll be heading out there in an hour or so once I'm awake enough to drive but of course she's due her shot in the next few minutes as soon as she finishes her breakfast. I checked online and our local Walmart seems to have a good range of the Relion monitors and strips in stock and at very reasonable prices. We do already have some of the KetoDiaStix in the house for my husband's youngest when he's here so if they don't have those in stock I can wait until Monday to go further and get those - I really don't want to leave her for long this weekend. Apparently there were no ketones present when the vet ran the urine test on Wednesday so I'd be looking for that to stay the same.
I do have U100 syringes - the vet didn't specify on their prescription but the pharmacist at Costco was very good - they've got a few cats on their system for lantus apparently - and made sure everything was what I needed.
The other question I had - the vet wants her back in on the 23rd for a glucose curve day. I really don't think it's going to go well - she's gone from being fairly comfortable (for her) with this vet to being an unholy terror with them just like she was with her old vet. If I can get the home monitoring sorted out, presumably I could cancel that day with the vet which I think is going to be crazily expensive for probably not the best results and call in her results for the whole week myself? The vet is very good with her and has been great with most things and seemed to know exactly what she was talking about when she explained the treatment and testing but they definitely wanted to be in control of managing her curve tests and really didn't want me doing those at home. She said it would be really difficult for me to get tests from a cat, but I see on here that most people seem to manage just fine. Is there a trick to it that makes it easy to do? And where exactly on the ear do I take the test - I don't want to hurt her more than I have to but neither do I want to subject her to a whole day of stress at the vet for something I could do without upsetting her too much here.
I can definitely do the tight regulation protocol as I'm not working at the moment - I'll cross that bridge when I get to it - so I'm also here to run curve tests when required at least for now. I feel she's more likely to be better regulated like that as it's closer to the way control would work with a human.
And she didn't eat much of her breakfast - I don't think she likes the MD food much - so I guess she has to skip this morning's shot anyway. I daren't give it to her when she's barely eaten. Her appetite was so bad the last week that the only thing she would eat at all was the SO. I'm so tempted to give her a bit more of that just to get her eating so she can have the shot - any thoughts on that one or is she better off skipping the shot this morning and getting back on track later?
Oh, and hi to Dweezil. Rosa isn't Manx by breed, but she, her twin and I are all from the Isle of Man so Manx by nationality.
