AZJenks
Member Since 2014
Honestly, the last couple of days hasn't been great.
We're nearing the two week mark of going cold turkey on the dry food, and while it started out ok, it's getting worse and not better. On a good day, he'll eat probably 3 ounces of wet food all day. Even assuming a low end of the recommended 0.5-1oz per pound, he should be consuming two whole cans a day to maintain weight. On a bad day, of which there have been plenty lately, he literally pushes the feeding dish away and begs for something with a crunch. I've tried warming the food, crumbling a small amount of dry food on top, tuna juice, parmesan cheese (which worked fantastic for about two days), and now am awaiting a delivery of Fortiflora (though my confidence that anything will make wet food more appealing is starting to wane).
After shunning wet food for most of the day and incessantly begging, we finally just broke down and gave him some dry which he ate like he was starved. Not surprisingly, there have been two episodes of awful diarrhea tonight and an actual raise in PM blood sugar despite a typical 3U dose.
He's a large-framed cat. So even at 19.5-20lb, his back end appears too gaunt for his build. His rear legs feel too bony, his body has consumed its post-neuter pooch, and his ribs and backbone are easily palpable. I guess thankfully he doesn't appear to have lost any more weight in the process.
So we have a dilemma.
If he doesn't eat sufficient amounts of wet food, then he's not going to get enough calories. Without sufficient calories, his body get what it needs from other places, like catabolizing his muscle mass leaving him weaker than he already is. At that point, no amount of blood sugar control and diet management will matter if he starves.
On the other hand, dry food will shore up his calorie needs because he'll actually eat it. But it will be at the expense of wrecking his BG numbers and his bowels, wasting valuable insulin, and backtracking from the transition to wet. We also can't afford experimenting with expensive bags of lower carb premium food hoping he'll find something that he likes.
On top of it all, his numbers still suck.
So what's a human to do?
We're nearing the two week mark of going cold turkey on the dry food, and while it started out ok, it's getting worse and not better. On a good day, he'll eat probably 3 ounces of wet food all day. Even assuming a low end of the recommended 0.5-1oz per pound, he should be consuming two whole cans a day to maintain weight. On a bad day, of which there have been plenty lately, he literally pushes the feeding dish away and begs for something with a crunch. I've tried warming the food, crumbling a small amount of dry food on top, tuna juice, parmesan cheese (which worked fantastic for about two days), and now am awaiting a delivery of Fortiflora (though my confidence that anything will make wet food more appealing is starting to wane).
After shunning wet food for most of the day and incessantly begging, we finally just broke down and gave him some dry which he ate like he was starved. Not surprisingly, there have been two episodes of awful diarrhea tonight and an actual raise in PM blood sugar despite a typical 3U dose.
He's a large-framed cat. So even at 19.5-20lb, his back end appears too gaunt for his build. His rear legs feel too bony, his body has consumed its post-neuter pooch, and his ribs and backbone are easily palpable. I guess thankfully he doesn't appear to have lost any more weight in the process.
So we have a dilemma.
If he doesn't eat sufficient amounts of wet food, then he's not going to get enough calories. Without sufficient calories, his body get what it needs from other places, like catabolizing his muscle mass leaving him weaker than he already is. At that point, no amount of blood sugar control and diet management will matter if he starves.
On the other hand, dry food will shore up his calorie needs because he'll actually eat it. But it will be at the expense of wrecking his BG numbers and his bowels, wasting valuable insulin, and backtracking from the transition to wet. We also can't afford experimenting with expensive bags of lower carb premium food hoping he'll find something that he likes.
On top of it all, his numbers still suck.
So what's a human to do?