Bandit and Beth
Member Since 2012
My cat Bandit was just diagnosed last Friday so I am new to this and trying to get up to speed on everything. I have two male cats, Bandit and Taggart, from the same litter that are 7 years old. This whole ordeal started in the spring when I decided to change up their food. Bandit has always had dandruff and it shows a lot since he is a black/white tuxedo cat. I started doing some research and found that the dry Science Diet I had been feeding for years was full of carbs and fillers so I switched them over to Wellness dry food. Over the course of the next few months while I was mixing the old and new food together I noticed that they were picking out the new food and only eating their favorite Science Diet. During this time I also noticed that Bandit was getting thinner, which was good since he had always been my chubby cat, however he was getting thinner since he was hardly eating any of the Wellness food. I worried that he was getting too thin so I switched back to the science diet and hoped his weight would level off.
Even after the switch he still seemed thin and I worried that he wasn’t eating enough so in August I took him to the vet. At that time he weighed 10.8 lbs and the vet said he was a nice healthy weight, but recommended switching completely to fancy feast canned food. My boys were in heaven since they love fancy feast and only ever got it as a treat. I still left out a small bit of dry food to tide them over and keep them from getting too hungry if I got home from work late. Everything was going well until last week when I noticed that one of Bandit’s eyes was cloudy. This scared me so I took him to the vet the next day. At this time he was down another 0.4 lbs since August and they diagnosed his eye as anterior uveitis so they did a full round of blood tests to look for all the terrible diseases that this could be a symptom for. Thank god all these came back negative, but the vet said his sugar level was very high and tested in the 400’s. I took him in again to do the urine test and he tested positive for sugar in his urine. Honestly I was a little relieved that he only had diabetes and not something as terrible like FeLV, so now we are trying to learn how to live with this diagnosis and keep Bandit healthy.
My vet thinks Bandit has Type 1 diabetes since his diet was already 80% canned food and he is a healthy weight. He prescribed me 2 units of Lantus twice/day and I have cut out all the dry food so both cats are now 100% on fancy feast classic canned food. I have to say since starting on the insulin Bandit has been doing wonderful! He is much more playful, even jumping up the walls to catch the laser pointer and his dandruff has almost completely gone away. I didn’t realize how lethargic Bandit has been lately, but seeing him now I realize he hasn’t been this active in a long time.
Initially my vet didn’t say anything to me about needing to do home testing, but I will probably start once we get a handle on everything. For the last week Bandit was getting eye drops, an antibiotic and the shot so it’s been a bit overwhelming going from no medication to all this! We go back to the vet next week to check how he’s doing and see if anything needs adjusting.
I guess I just have two questions for everyone as I’m still trying to learn all the terminology:
1. Since Bandit tested positive for sugar in his urine I believe that means he had Ketones, but does that also mean he has Ketoacidosis?
2. If he truly does have Type 1 will he ever go into remission or will he be insulin dependent the rest of his life? Is there anything different I need to know about treating Type 1 vs. Type 2?
Thanks for listening and all your help!
Beth
Even after the switch he still seemed thin and I worried that he wasn’t eating enough so in August I took him to the vet. At that time he weighed 10.8 lbs and the vet said he was a nice healthy weight, but recommended switching completely to fancy feast canned food. My boys were in heaven since they love fancy feast and only ever got it as a treat. I still left out a small bit of dry food to tide them over and keep them from getting too hungry if I got home from work late. Everything was going well until last week when I noticed that one of Bandit’s eyes was cloudy. This scared me so I took him to the vet the next day. At this time he was down another 0.4 lbs since August and they diagnosed his eye as anterior uveitis so they did a full round of blood tests to look for all the terrible diseases that this could be a symptom for. Thank god all these came back negative, but the vet said his sugar level was very high and tested in the 400’s. I took him in again to do the urine test and he tested positive for sugar in his urine. Honestly I was a little relieved that he only had diabetes and not something as terrible like FeLV, so now we are trying to learn how to live with this diagnosis and keep Bandit healthy.
My vet thinks Bandit has Type 1 diabetes since his diet was already 80% canned food and he is a healthy weight. He prescribed me 2 units of Lantus twice/day and I have cut out all the dry food so both cats are now 100% on fancy feast classic canned food. I have to say since starting on the insulin Bandit has been doing wonderful! He is much more playful, even jumping up the walls to catch the laser pointer and his dandruff has almost completely gone away. I didn’t realize how lethargic Bandit has been lately, but seeing him now I realize he hasn’t been this active in a long time.
Initially my vet didn’t say anything to me about needing to do home testing, but I will probably start once we get a handle on everything. For the last week Bandit was getting eye drops, an antibiotic and the shot so it’s been a bit overwhelming going from no medication to all this! We go back to the vet next week to check how he’s doing and see if anything needs adjusting.
I guess I just have two questions for everyone as I’m still trying to learn all the terminology:
1. Since Bandit tested positive for sugar in his urine I believe that means he had Ketones, but does that also mean he has Ketoacidosis?
2. If he truly does have Type 1 will he ever go into remission or will he be insulin dependent the rest of his life? Is there anything different I need to know about treating Type 1 vs. Type 2?
Thanks for listening and all your help!
Beth