Sushi The Cat
Member Since 2015
Hello All!
My name is Sarah and I am currently living in the UK with my husband and our 2 cats.
My cat Sushi was diagnosed with asthma 4 years ago and with diabetes 2 weeks ago, while on ketoacidosis.
I have been lost and, quite frankly, exhausted of all the vet visits and medications... I have also been feeling very lonely and judged by most people: "You should just put him out of his misery". As if that was that simple...
Anyway... I rescued Sushi 5 years ago and he was dagnosed with asthma 6 months later. I was living in Portugal and the only treatment was 2 week worth steroid injections. His muscles were becoming weaker and I thought to myself that for sure Americans had something better! Found the aerokat chamber and insisted on starting straight away. It was a massive success with the inhaled steroids. Very low dose and the odd steroid injection.
We moved to the UK in the beggining of 2014 and his asthma started to get worse... Again, he was the only cat on inhaled steroids and we adjusted his dosage and everything was fine. We started using the salbutamol inhaler in emergencies. This year, in August, he had a very severe asthma crisis because his "brother" went to the vet for his vaccine and came back with the smell. Sushi attacked the other cat for almost 24h. This nervous episode got him a few hours in the oxygen chamber and a steroid injection. The first steroid injection in almost 2 years.
That steroid injection put him in ketoacidosis and gave us the diagnosis of diabetes. He was at the vet for a few days, got better and came home. He is on the adaptation of insulin dosage and it is very uncommon here for owners to make glucose readings at home. The vet does it until an ideal insulin dose is established.
My problem is, there is great evidence that he is diabetic because of all the steroids he had to take during his life and yesterday he had another big asthma crisis. He was already very nervous from staying at the vet for a few days in the previous week and There was a bird mocking him outside...a magpie. He got so nervous that I thought he was going to die. It took me 7h to settle his breathing pattern to something manageable with intermittent salbutamol puffs. Went to the vet without him to seek advice, our vet was away and the vet that was there (he wasn't new to us, as I spend so much time there) said that he will probably need prednisolone pills (5mg) as needed on top of the inhaled steroid...2-3 days in crisis and maybe then twice a week...but adjustable as we go. He said that this would probably affect his diabetes, but not as much as an injection. And that we needed to do something because I have to be able to have normal people days and be able to leave the house without being concerned that he can die because he saw a bird.
The thing is... Is there anyone out there in a similar situation?
This appears to be very rare and I am scared... I am quite an expert in feline asthma, but diabetes and the both of them together, it is too much. I know that the inhaler is very safe with diabetes, but the pills are another story...
I am very grateful to have found this forum and I thank you all in advance for the time you may spend reading our story.
Lots of Love,
Sarah
My name is Sarah and I am currently living in the UK with my husband and our 2 cats.
My cat Sushi was diagnosed with asthma 4 years ago and with diabetes 2 weeks ago, while on ketoacidosis.
I have been lost and, quite frankly, exhausted of all the vet visits and medications... I have also been feeling very lonely and judged by most people: "You should just put him out of his misery". As if that was that simple...
Anyway... I rescued Sushi 5 years ago and he was dagnosed with asthma 6 months later. I was living in Portugal and the only treatment was 2 week worth steroid injections. His muscles were becoming weaker and I thought to myself that for sure Americans had something better! Found the aerokat chamber and insisted on starting straight away. It was a massive success with the inhaled steroids. Very low dose and the odd steroid injection.
We moved to the UK in the beggining of 2014 and his asthma started to get worse... Again, he was the only cat on inhaled steroids and we adjusted his dosage and everything was fine. We started using the salbutamol inhaler in emergencies. This year, in August, he had a very severe asthma crisis because his "brother" went to the vet for his vaccine and came back with the smell. Sushi attacked the other cat for almost 24h. This nervous episode got him a few hours in the oxygen chamber and a steroid injection. The first steroid injection in almost 2 years.
That steroid injection put him in ketoacidosis and gave us the diagnosis of diabetes. He was at the vet for a few days, got better and came home. He is on the adaptation of insulin dosage and it is very uncommon here for owners to make glucose readings at home. The vet does it until an ideal insulin dose is established.
My problem is, there is great evidence that he is diabetic because of all the steroids he had to take during his life and yesterday he had another big asthma crisis. He was already very nervous from staying at the vet for a few days in the previous week and There was a bird mocking him outside...a magpie. He got so nervous that I thought he was going to die. It took me 7h to settle his breathing pattern to something manageable with intermittent salbutamol puffs. Went to the vet without him to seek advice, our vet was away and the vet that was there (he wasn't new to us, as I spend so much time there) said that he will probably need prednisolone pills (5mg) as needed on top of the inhaled steroid...2-3 days in crisis and maybe then twice a week...but adjustable as we go. He said that this would probably affect his diabetes, but not as much as an injection. And that we needed to do something because I have to be able to have normal people days and be able to leave the house without being concerned that he can die because he saw a bird.
The thing is... Is there anyone out there in a similar situation?
This appears to be very rare and I am scared... I am quite an expert in feline asthma, but diabetes and the both of them together, it is too much. I know that the inhaler is very safe with diabetes, but the pills are another story...
I am very grateful to have found this forum and I thank you all in advance for the time you may spend reading our story.
Lots of Love,
Sarah


