What you can do is shoot at what would normally be his +10. You can then shoot on time tomorrow morning.
You then have two options to get back on schedule:
—shoot at +13 in the morning which would be one hour earlier than your regular shot time
—shoot at +14 in the morning which would be at his engulfs shot time.
When we need to shoot early and then get back on time, it is much easier to get back to your normal shot time then it is if we shoot late. If we shoot late, Elise provided that info above and you can also read it in Getting Back on Schedule. You might want t bookmark that post so you have it on hand if you ever have to stall. To bookmark a post like that, when you have it open, click on “watch thread” and then select “without getting email notifications”. It will store it in your “watched thread” files that you can find at the upper left of any page.
I believe you work at home and could do tight regulation if you wanted to. Here is a post on doing TR while working.
With both methods, you must get at least one test in the evening. Otherwise you are missing half your data and we don’t know how low Gideon is going. It is not safe to raise a dose if you don’t know how low the dose is taking them and cats tend to go lower at night. You could do a +2 and a before bed test and have some data for us to consider.
Since 5/19, she’s testing enough for TR but she must get at least one nighttime test for TR. However, as I mentioned above, she needs to do that whether she does TR or SLGS. No tests at night at all leaves us unable to give solid dosing advice and I will never suggest increases if I can’t see how low the dose is going.Is she testing enough for TR?
The first goal is to get the cat regulated. The kitty will always be diabetic.. always, but one can hope to go into a "diabetic remission" with being food controlled.think we are fighting a losing battle
This group has been around for quite a while. I don't know about percentages, but I think we are getting close to 500 cats going into remission. As for passing away, remember that many of these kitties are older, and get all the usual old cat diseases too. I also don't think there is an "average lifespan". Neko lasted just shy of 5 years, but at the end had kidney disease, heart disease, small cell lymphoma, plus some other issues due to her acromegaly. I've seen cats on insulin for 9 years. As for small cell lymphoma (on my third now, sigh), it depends partly on the chemo protocol. Current one is just past two years. Neko did not pass from SCL, she passed with SCL and diabetes. Ditto the second one, it was another cancer that took him.One question...does anyone have stats for the cats in this group that go into remission? I have been seeing so many kitties in the group that have recently passed away. It is making me think we are fighting a losing battle, though at the moment, Gideon is doing very well. From this group's experience, what is the average lifespan once a kitty is diagnosed with diabetes? I have a kitty with small cell lymphoma, and I was told average lifespan after diagnosis is 1-2 years, but, our kitty is doing very well, and I expect to exceed this estimate by far. So, estimates are just that, estimates.