We do have a home tester and do occasionally do a curve to monitor him. We don't test all the time because he was fighting us a lot and we felt it was very stressful for him.
We are currently doing 2 units twice a day and his sugar is still kind of up and down. We've seen some great numbers and some not so great numbers.
The vet has pretty much thrown his hands up and assumes he is getting into food around the house but there is no way he could be.
Thanks,
Jen.
Okay, it's great you have a meter and know how to use it!
So, first thing first. Get him comfortable with the new process of testing regularly.
Some people started slower than I did, and you can too.
Have a testing spot. I chose a spot that is close to the feeding spot, and Fabby now correlates test = food.
Go to your spot, grab your cat, give cuddles and lots of pets. I've even used this time to brush her.
Take out your kit. (I keep treats in the kit, kit is now associated with treats!)
Then I rub the ear I'm going to use. I'm checking to make sure the ear is warm and if not warm it by rubbing. The blood comes easier if the ear is warm. Some use a warm rice sock, but I've never had to, but you can.
I tried the plunger thing the first week but found it easier on us both to just poke the ear with the lancet.
(If your kitty needs more time on the process just do the routine without the actual poking, he will get used to the sitting, rubbing, then treat, so when you add in the poke, kitty won't care because treat is coming.)
I've found when Fabby's glucose is higher she is more food aggressive, which means she is really ready for her poke treat. For a treat I use Fancy Feast one ingredient treats in salmon because they are no carb and individually wrapped so I can keep a few in the test kit itself.
So after three days of this routine 2-4 times a day add in your poke. If you get resistance at first don't give up, just be ready with that treat fast.
Doing it this way, Fabby had the routine down in 3 days. Then she started meeting me at the testing spot for her meal times. When I'm petting her before testing she drools waiting for her treat.
The way Vetsulin works is you test glucose, then feed, wait to make sure food stays down, then shoot insulin. Fabby will see a little drop in glucose in the first 2 hours because low carb food actually makes her glucose numbers go lower. Then between hours 6-8 Fabby's glucose is at it's lowest. Then by hour 12 we're back to the regular number her body keeps her at. I feed her 4 times a day because the food helps her regulate her sugar on her own better than the insulin dropping big. This is also why you really should be testing regularly before you switch to a low carb food. The food may give your kitty a drop on it's own, and then adding insulin at the 6-8 hour mark that may put your kitty's glucose too low, where you're at risk for hypo. Read through the forum a bit. When you get to the hypo threads they are always heartbreaking just because they are so stressful and life threatening, and just scary. The more experienced people here help ease that stress and walk the people through what to do. But if you can avoid that experience, please do.
Also, we use a spreadsheet to track glucose. Like the one you see in my signature. You can click on it and see how Fabby goes, and how the spreadsheet looks, and our experience. Setting up your spreadsheet will help the experienced folks here help you immediately if there is a problem.
I often ask the experienced folks to take a look at my spreadsheet every couple of weeks and offer suggestions over in the Vetsulin forum. They have been right on every time.
If your vet is uninformed about the food, and has basically given up, well... you will find help and great instruction here. However, after you get kitty used to testing, switch foods and then adjust the insulin so kitty can start to try to manage his own sugars better, you may want a good vet that's informed on treating diabetes as your regular vet, so if you need anything in an emergency you have someone you can trust. My first vet seemed informed, but way over charged and the level of care wasn't what I wanted. (I was pressured into leaving Fabby at the vet for a couple days, when we could have done the curve at home and gotten more reliable numbers.)
Back to testing... probably the biggest confidence builder on my end with testing was I watched several YouTube videos about how to test, and took all the notes of their procedure. For example, there is a better spot on the ear to test so it is less painful for the cat. The videos taught me where to poke, and most important that you cat can learn to be just fine with it. And Fabby is now...
so if you have more questions, ask! We've probably been there!