Cara & Sabrina
Member Since 2021
Hi! Sabrina was lying on the wood floor yesterday (Sunday) and when she tried to get up, she stumbled a few times. Never having seen this before, I rushed to some high carb can food and within 1 minute she was eating it. Then I thought of how I should check her BG. It was 307. She had only been eating for 2-3 minutes. Since she was 307, I thought perhaps she was just slipping on the floor and it was not diabetes related. But then at +4.25 my 22 year old daughter texted that Sabrina acted woozy, nearly fell off the couch, and continued to look dazed, so she gave her some food with honey in it. My daughter is visiting for a few weeks and doesn't know how to check BG. We haven't seen any other symptoms since then.
I'm confused and more worried now. Why was she woozy but was at 307? Would a little bit of food change her number that quickly? I started giving only LC can food on Saturday, so that could be the cause. And maybe I didn't give her enough?
I also received the syringes I ordered and used those instead of the Basaglar pen needles on Sat night and Sun morning. Being new to syringes and reading the stopper, and the lines being so small and close together, I may have given her closer to 1.5 units on Sunday morning. I have gone back to using the pen needles for the moment, to be on the safe side. I feel so bad! And now I'm quite worried about doing something wrong with her dose, her food, or something, and causing her harm. :-( Please help me with the syringes. I got 3/10 mL, 29G, 1/2". There is such a miniscule difference between 1, 1.5 and 2. 1st question, how should the stopper line up to the desired unit mark? 2nd question, if dosing from a glargine pen, should I be doing anything to make sure there aren't air bubbles? Is there a narrower option of syringe, with possibly fewer units, so the markings are father apart?
Lastly, it could be that the pen hasn't been actually giving her 1 unit all this time, or that I've been missing and giving some fur shots without knowing it. Or too shallow, if that's a thing. I pet the injection area after and haven't felt wetness, but 1 unit is so little liquid. The syringe needles are longer, so with her long hair, I liked this idea better than the 8 mm needle pens.
Another question, with hypoglycemia symptoms, should we treat it first, then test? The sheet on what to do doesn't address testing (that I saw).
I'm confused and more worried now. Why was she woozy but was at 307? Would a little bit of food change her number that quickly? I started giving only LC can food on Saturday, so that could be the cause. And maybe I didn't give her enough?
I also received the syringes I ordered and used those instead of the Basaglar pen needles on Sat night and Sun morning. Being new to syringes and reading the stopper, and the lines being so small and close together, I may have given her closer to 1.5 units on Sunday morning. I have gone back to using the pen needles for the moment, to be on the safe side. I feel so bad! And now I'm quite worried about doing something wrong with her dose, her food, or something, and causing her harm. :-( Please help me with the syringes. I got 3/10 mL, 29G, 1/2". There is such a miniscule difference between 1, 1.5 and 2. 1st question, how should the stopper line up to the desired unit mark? 2nd question, if dosing from a glargine pen, should I be doing anything to make sure there aren't air bubbles? Is there a narrower option of syringe, with possibly fewer units, so the markings are father apart?
Lastly, it could be that the pen hasn't been actually giving her 1 unit all this time, or that I've been missing and giving some fur shots without knowing it. Or too shallow, if that's a thing. I pet the injection area after and haven't felt wetness, but 1 unit is so little liquid. The syringe needles are longer, so with her long hair, I liked this idea better than the 8 mm needle pens.
Another question, with hypoglycemia symptoms, should we treat it first, then test? The sheet on what to do doesn't address testing (that I saw).