Setia
Member Since 2023
Hi everyone,
I apologize if this is the wrong place. I tried to look for answers already and I'm at a loss. Ollie was diagnosed with diabetes on Thursday. He's about 7. He has a history of pancreatitis and IBD. Last Jan he almost died from an enlarged gallbladder and the trifecta of liver, pancreas, and gallbladder issues. He made a miraculous recovery and the bet switched him to Royal Canin hydrolyzed protein. The switch seemed to dramatically reduce his vomiting and general issues and he went from a severely underweight 8 lbs. to the 12 lbs. he is today.
He has always been a grazer. The vet said we needed to immediately switch to 2 meals a day, 12 hours apart for his insulin. He is on 1 unit of ProZinc every 12 hours.
Great. I have no problem with this. Ollie takes great issue though and is only eating a very small amount at a time. When I read about transitioning from grazing to meals, everything says the process can take months. I really think starving him is not going to convince him he needs to eat at the next meal, since it has not yet.
The vet had little advice but she was not my normal vet. Her concern was just that he needs 2 meals and he needs his insulin. My regular vet had an emergency and will be out for a while (possibly until early-mid March!!) and I do not want to text him under those circumstances.
So my questions are as follows:
Can we transition to 2x meals a day more slowly at first? By maybe feeding 4 meals instead of 2 to start with? Or will he figure it out when he "gets hungry enough?"
Even though he has the history of IBD/Pancreas issues, should we switch to a wet lower carb food? I suspect I know the answer to this is yet but this may be an issue we can wait for the regular vet to return for. The wet HP foods seem to be... Very low quality and have horrible reviews (not to mention almost $4 a can).
The vet suggested I needed a testing device from them, but that I did not actually have to test. I have read a lot to the contrary and spent many years having to make sure my glucose was not too low. I am very familiar with testing (humans). I assume most people test? Do you use a human monitor?
Any help or advice is appreciated. So far Ollie seems to be doing great and other than being annoyed at not having food when he wants it, he does not care about his insulin shots.
Thanks so much,
Setia
I apologize if this is the wrong place. I tried to look for answers already and I'm at a loss. Ollie was diagnosed with diabetes on Thursday. He's about 7. He has a history of pancreatitis and IBD. Last Jan he almost died from an enlarged gallbladder and the trifecta of liver, pancreas, and gallbladder issues. He made a miraculous recovery and the bet switched him to Royal Canin hydrolyzed protein. The switch seemed to dramatically reduce his vomiting and general issues and he went from a severely underweight 8 lbs. to the 12 lbs. he is today.
He has always been a grazer. The vet said we needed to immediately switch to 2 meals a day, 12 hours apart for his insulin. He is on 1 unit of ProZinc every 12 hours.
Great. I have no problem with this. Ollie takes great issue though and is only eating a very small amount at a time. When I read about transitioning from grazing to meals, everything says the process can take months. I really think starving him is not going to convince him he needs to eat at the next meal, since it has not yet.
The vet had little advice but she was not my normal vet. Her concern was just that he needs 2 meals and he needs his insulin. My regular vet had an emergency and will be out for a while (possibly until early-mid March!!) and I do not want to text him under those circumstances.
So my questions are as follows:
Can we transition to 2x meals a day more slowly at first? By maybe feeding 4 meals instead of 2 to start with? Or will he figure it out when he "gets hungry enough?"
Even though he has the history of IBD/Pancreas issues, should we switch to a wet lower carb food? I suspect I know the answer to this is yet but this may be an issue we can wait for the regular vet to return for. The wet HP foods seem to be... Very low quality and have horrible reviews (not to mention almost $4 a can).
The vet suggested I needed a testing device from them, but that I did not actually have to test. I have read a lot to the contrary and spent many years having to make sure my glucose was not too low. I am very familiar with testing (humans). I assume most people test? Do you use a human monitor?
Any help or advice is appreciated. So far Ollie seems to be doing great and other than being annoyed at not having food when he wants it, he does not care about his insulin shots.
Thanks so much,
Setia

has your vet discussed budesonide with you?