I am SO thankful for this forum! The other night (2 am) I was packing for a trip and came back into the room and noticed my female rescue kitty of 5 years, Poulet, was practically falling on her left side in the rear while playing with her housemate, Chicken, who is 10 years old and also a rescue. She was not acting like she was in pain, in fact she acted as though she wasn't even falling. *nothing to see here, I'm fine!*. I immediately thought OMG she's had a stroke!!
History: I adopted her from the Pound in LA. She was about 3 months old, and weighing 3 pounds, very lethargic. After adoption they held her to have her spayed and vaccinated. After she was spayed she developed a fever and had to be out on fluids, antibiotics and a fever reducer for two weeks before I had ever the chance to take her home. She was 2 1/2 lb at this point. Turned out she had been in a fight and the bites created abscesses. Her fever spiked before each one burst. Long story short and $2,000 later, Poulet came home.
She and Chicken had always eaten Eukanuba dry (I know, bad, but I did not know at the time) until I started them both on Wellness dry 6 months ago, the Wellness Core dry about 2-3 months ago. Then I started supplementing with Wellness wet and then switched to Wellness Core Indoor dry with supplemental wet. I had no idea dry was so bad for them, nor did I know that grains were bad for them. Well, since the incident four days ago and a trip to the ER vet at 2:30 am, they are STRICTLY both on Wellness wet with 5-7 carbs per can. She gets a little over one can split up 2 to 3 times a day (approx 220 calories, she is slightly overweight and weighs 15.5 lb). Chicken has always been skinny, weighing in at 7 lb but very small framed. He gets about 120 cals but I'm presently upping the amount.
Poulet is a bit chubby but not considered obese, she was 17 lb at one point so being 15.5 right now is good (exercise!) but she could still stand to lose another half to 1 lb, slowly. She used to consume a considerable amount of water and urinated a lot for as long as I can remember. However the input/output amount seems less since being put on an all wet diet.
Anyway, at the vet they ran her BG (212 mg/dl) and it was really not as high as expected if the left leg is experiencing peripheral neuropathy. An hour after she arrived at the vet she was only limping on it, no longer falling. Not all the way to the hock every time but still apparent. Her potassium was borderline low, 3.5 mmol/L.
She still scratches with the leg, can still jump on to the bed and sofa with mild wobbliness on the one left leg. The vet feels she may have slight atrophy of the left leg as well.
She doesn't seem to be in pain, the vet sent her home with a pain reliever for the first three days just in case it was a musculoskeletal injury. But I literally walked out of the room for 10 seconds and came back to her flipping on the floor. She seems to either be better in some way, or more than likely has learned to balance and compensate, since I'm sure reversing neuro, if that is what it is, will take quite a while.
I was instructed to have a fructosamine test performed this week. I will not opt for a curve to be performed until after the fructosamine test comes back. She will have her present BG tested on her follow up as well, although I'm sure it will not read true due to stress .
I didnt know dry food dehydrates cats and causes then to drink more until recently. In fact, the er vet didnt advise anything, I only made changes after my own research. Plus the grains, I'm sure, increased her glucose levels.
We are at a holding pattern until she can get in for the fructosamine test. She does NOT seem distressed or in pain. In fact, she has higher energy. She seemed to be starving all the time before but now not as much as she seems satisfied after her wet meals.
The vet said he expected her BG to be way higher, but may only be elevated due to her extreme stress for the car ride to the vet at dark thirty in the morning. But still 212 is not 74-159.
I am wondering if her levels are still not too high if the diet change and methyl b12 will reverse her problem ( which btw is not definitive at this point). We are still in the diagnosis stage since her numbers are not as high as cats which usually come in with peripheral neuropathy.
I was going to buy a human glucosameter however it was $75 for 100 test strips,plus the lancet, and meter just to perform a home curve. But think I'm going to wait until the fructosamine test comes back. I hate to bring her to the vet again but I know I have to. They had to anesthetize her to get a blood draw from her neck because she was moving too much and a little pudgy. Ugh, I'd hate to have to do that again.
I'm just so glad it wasn't a saddle thrombus or stroke. Also, she snores. Not sure if that's just because of fluid or anatomy but she didnt do it when she was younger and thinner. In fact, she "snores" when awake and really, really relaxed, but not when fully alert, playing, etc.
Any feedback is hugely appreciated. I hate not knowing. I'm hoping she will not need insulin. Even if she does, the numbers and the past diet causes me to believe diet correction will correct it, or at the very least lower the amount of insulin she will need, if at all.
The only thing I am truly worried about is that now that she is on strict low carb, and her BG is probably naturally lower, is she at risk for being too low (sans injections) not having the high carb diet she was used to.
History: I adopted her from the Pound in LA. She was about 3 months old, and weighing 3 pounds, very lethargic. After adoption they held her to have her spayed and vaccinated. After she was spayed she developed a fever and had to be out on fluids, antibiotics and a fever reducer for two weeks before I had ever the chance to take her home. She was 2 1/2 lb at this point. Turned out she had been in a fight and the bites created abscesses. Her fever spiked before each one burst. Long story short and $2,000 later, Poulet came home.
She and Chicken had always eaten Eukanuba dry (I know, bad, but I did not know at the time) until I started them both on Wellness dry 6 months ago, the Wellness Core dry about 2-3 months ago. Then I started supplementing with Wellness wet and then switched to Wellness Core Indoor dry with supplemental wet. I had no idea dry was so bad for them, nor did I know that grains were bad for them. Well, since the incident four days ago and a trip to the ER vet at 2:30 am, they are STRICTLY both on Wellness wet with 5-7 carbs per can. She gets a little over one can split up 2 to 3 times a day (approx 220 calories, she is slightly overweight and weighs 15.5 lb). Chicken has always been skinny, weighing in at 7 lb but very small framed. He gets about 120 cals but I'm presently upping the amount.
Poulet is a bit chubby but not considered obese, she was 17 lb at one point so being 15.5 right now is good (exercise!) but she could still stand to lose another half to 1 lb, slowly. She used to consume a considerable amount of water and urinated a lot for as long as I can remember. However the input/output amount seems less since being put on an all wet diet.
Anyway, at the vet they ran her BG (212 mg/dl) and it was really not as high as expected if the left leg is experiencing peripheral neuropathy. An hour after she arrived at the vet she was only limping on it, no longer falling. Not all the way to the hock every time but still apparent. Her potassium was borderline low, 3.5 mmol/L.
She still scratches with the leg, can still jump on to the bed and sofa with mild wobbliness on the one left leg. The vet feels she may have slight atrophy of the left leg as well.
She doesn't seem to be in pain, the vet sent her home with a pain reliever for the first three days just in case it was a musculoskeletal injury. But I literally walked out of the room for 10 seconds and came back to her flipping on the floor. She seems to either be better in some way, or more than likely has learned to balance and compensate, since I'm sure reversing neuro, if that is what it is, will take quite a while.
I was instructed to have a fructosamine test performed this week. I will not opt for a curve to be performed until after the fructosamine test comes back. She will have her present BG tested on her follow up as well, although I'm sure it will not read true due to stress .
I didnt know dry food dehydrates cats and causes then to drink more until recently. In fact, the er vet didnt advise anything, I only made changes after my own research. Plus the grains, I'm sure, increased her glucose levels.
We are at a holding pattern until she can get in for the fructosamine test. She does NOT seem distressed or in pain. In fact, she has higher energy. She seemed to be starving all the time before but now not as much as she seems satisfied after her wet meals.
The vet said he expected her BG to be way higher, but may only be elevated due to her extreme stress for the car ride to the vet at dark thirty in the morning. But still 212 is not 74-159.
I am wondering if her levels are still not too high if the diet change and methyl b12 will reverse her problem ( which btw is not definitive at this point). We are still in the diagnosis stage since her numbers are not as high as cats which usually come in with peripheral neuropathy.
I was going to buy a human glucosameter however it was $75 for 100 test strips,plus the lancet, and meter just to perform a home curve. But think I'm going to wait until the fructosamine test comes back. I hate to bring her to the vet again but I know I have to. They had to anesthetize her to get a blood draw from her neck because she was moving too much and a little pudgy. Ugh, I'd hate to have to do that again.
I'm just so glad it wasn't a saddle thrombus or stroke. Also, she snores. Not sure if that's just because of fluid or anatomy but she didnt do it when she was younger and thinner. In fact, she "snores" when awake and really, really relaxed, but not when fully alert, playing, etc.
Any feedback is hugely appreciated. I hate not knowing. I'm hoping she will not need insulin. Even if she does, the numbers and the past diet causes me to believe diet correction will correct it, or at the very least lower the amount of insulin she will need, if at all.
The only thing I am truly worried about is that now that she is on strict low carb, and her BG is probably naturally lower, is she at risk for being too low (sans injections) not having the high carb diet she was used to.