Cat mom
Member Since 2017
This forum helped me greatly 3 years ago. I had a 14 year old cat that blood test showed was diabetic. My vet put him on insulin and it was such a rocky road he nearly died from hypo. If it wasn't for this forum telling me to keep Karo syrup in the house he would have died.
I eventually asked for a copy of the blood test and the vet had missed a raging infection his white blood cell count was through the roof. We treated the infection I took away his dry food , he was a dry food junkie but we could never get the insulin right. I had tortured him with ear pricks. I was ready to give up and was waiting for his vet to return to have him euthanized. Believe me that was is a very hard decision, this guy is my buddy but I could no longer torture him.
The vet was out of town for two weeks thankfully. In that time being off dry food and on canned food only he went into remission for the past 3 years.
I am back because now he is 17 years old and he has been peeing a lot and I tested his blood glucose levels and it was 300. I was able to do a urine test and he has no ketones. When I pricked his ear he went crazy for 4 hours I could not calm him down. He was in pain scratching his ears.
Meanwhile I have been sick and cannot get him to the vet. A nightmare! He is eating but he has lost weight he wants to pee only on pee pads. He sleeps a lot. I'm trying my hardest to feel well enough to get him to the vet for a full blood panel.
I am worried that if he is diagnosed with diabetes that it will be absolutely impossible to prick his ears for blood. It will be torture for him I know that. Insulin proved to be very dangerous and we never got it right the first time. I was lucky to have him go into remission.
At 17 years old I don't know if this will be worth it. To take a geriatric cat and torture him with ear pricks seems cruel. It's far too much pain for him
I read about oral insulin called Glipizide. Have any of you used this? And do you still have to do regular glucose blood testing at home with this medication?
I have to find out if course if there is an underlying condition. I don't know if he has kidney failure or some other problem going on. But I want to be ready to talk to the vet about anything. I know at his age most vets would say put him down.
Of course I want him to live but I don't want him to live a tortured life.
Any advice is appreciated.
I eventually asked for a copy of the blood test and the vet had missed a raging infection his white blood cell count was through the roof. We treated the infection I took away his dry food , he was a dry food junkie but we could never get the insulin right. I had tortured him with ear pricks. I was ready to give up and was waiting for his vet to return to have him euthanized. Believe me that was is a very hard decision, this guy is my buddy but I could no longer torture him.
The vet was out of town for two weeks thankfully. In that time being off dry food and on canned food only he went into remission for the past 3 years.
I am back because now he is 17 years old and he has been peeing a lot and I tested his blood glucose levels and it was 300. I was able to do a urine test and he has no ketones. When I pricked his ear he went crazy for 4 hours I could not calm him down. He was in pain scratching his ears.
Meanwhile I have been sick and cannot get him to the vet. A nightmare! He is eating but he has lost weight he wants to pee only on pee pads. He sleeps a lot. I'm trying my hardest to feel well enough to get him to the vet for a full blood panel.
I am worried that if he is diagnosed with diabetes that it will be absolutely impossible to prick his ears for blood. It will be torture for him I know that. Insulin proved to be very dangerous and we never got it right the first time. I was lucky to have him go into remission.
At 17 years old I don't know if this will be worth it. To take a geriatric cat and torture him with ear pricks seems cruel. It's far too much pain for him
I read about oral insulin called Glipizide. Have any of you used this? And do you still have to do regular glucose blood testing at home with this medication?
I have to find out if course if there is an underlying condition. I don't know if he has kidney failure or some other problem going on. But I want to be ready to talk to the vet about anything. I know at his age most vets would say put him down.
Of course I want him to live but I don't want him to live a tortured life.
Any advice is appreciated.
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