Steph
Member Since 2013
...Stubbie might have lived longer. I am a 20-year health/medical and pet journalist. Five years ago, I didn't know I ABSOLUTELY HAD to calculate Dry Matter Analysis carb count (Yes, it requires math, my nemesis...) to control his BG. I was going by the Guaranteed Analysis count that most food products show us; that was easy, yes? I couldn't understand why I couldn't control his sugar: I blamed the insulin. And I was religious, testing and poking, and poking and testing. He continued to decline because of my lack of knowledge. And did a veterinarian ever mention this? Nope, not at all, never, ever.
Now, with Hope, and her other chronic conditions, such as CKD, I am religious about doing the math with the Dry Matter Analysis equation. It has greatly limited the wet food I can give her and I know she gets bored, but (I will NOT feed Friskies pates. They contain "Poultry By-Products, Meat By-Products" and we all know what By-Products are! (Oh, no!) And they brand has been cited for including synthetic vitamins. It includes multiple artificial ingredients. This is a personal choice as someone who studied the details.)
Her only dry food is high protein 1) Wysong Epigen 90 and 2) Dr. Elsey's Clean Protein, Chicken (not the salmon). Her nadir rests nicely at 137, and I do have to mildly adjust dosing every month or so. I only test her every couple of weeks. I used to be obsessing about that daily; but I do know I have to check twice monthly because her BG does change.
Her wet foods include some Weruva, Hounds & Gatos, etc...It's easy to "think" some are OK, and they are not at all...
Here's a good calculator. http://scheyderweb.com/cats/catfood.html It would be great if we maintained a list of wet foods here, those not included on Dr. Lisa's 2017 chart, that we could share with dry matter values under, say, 3 percent. There are many foods that are new, and aren't on that chart. Love to know what you are feeding that's super-low carb...and tasty to a kitty.
If this helps one cat, wonderful! I'm certainly not an expert, but had had a long journey with this: 10 years? Meow for now.
Now, with Hope, and her other chronic conditions, such as CKD, I am religious about doing the math with the Dry Matter Analysis equation. It has greatly limited the wet food I can give her and I know she gets bored, but (I will NOT feed Friskies pates. They contain "Poultry By-Products, Meat By-Products" and we all know what By-Products are! (Oh, no!) And they brand has been cited for including synthetic vitamins. It includes multiple artificial ingredients. This is a personal choice as someone who studied the details.)
Her only dry food is high protein 1) Wysong Epigen 90 and 2) Dr. Elsey's Clean Protein, Chicken (not the salmon). Her nadir rests nicely at 137, and I do have to mildly adjust dosing every month or so. I only test her every couple of weeks. I used to be obsessing about that daily; but I do know I have to check twice monthly because her BG does change.
Her wet foods include some Weruva, Hounds & Gatos, etc...It's easy to "think" some are OK, and they are not at all...
Here's a good calculator. http://scheyderweb.com/cats/catfood.html It would be great if we maintained a list of wet foods here, those not included on Dr. Lisa's 2017 chart, that we could share with dry matter values under, say, 3 percent. There are many foods that are new, and aren't on that chart. Love to know what you are feeding that's super-low carb...and tasty to a kitty.
If this helps one cat, wonderful! I'm certainly not an expert, but had had a long journey with this: 10 years? Meow for now.
the food I was feeding Misty for years had named meats and brown rice, etc so I thought it was good for her, but turns out it was way too high carb for a cat and that's what brought us here to a diabetes diagnosis.