I'm curious...

Giomax

Member Since 2018
Wouldn't you think BG levels should match more closely from day to day if they're getting the same number of units and the same food? One day Max'll be over 400 at +4 and the next day he'll be in the 200s at +4. Sometimes the differences are even more dramatic than that. All he does is lay around the house, especially now that neuropathy has set in, so he's not getting any amount of crazy exercise to burn the sugar off.
 
I think it depends on what his body is doing as to what his numbers will be, more will weigh in have you started the b12 injections yet
Nice yellow at +7
 
Remember he isn't use to any of these numbers so his body is still fighting it and adjusting. When he poops can make a difference, a different flavor of food makes a difference, unless your weighing food on a digital scale a extra crumb can make a difference.
 
I’d get familiar with the idea of bouncing. It was hard for me to understand in the beginning but it’s a thing Ming loves to do. Anything “low” even if it’s a 250, can cause a bounce if kitty is used to numbers in the 400s. With time, more and more 250s will show up and kitty’s liver won’t go into hyper drive and release sugars at the sight of 250. It will start to receognize 250 as an okay number. And then the goal is to get kitty to like numbers as low as 50-70 which is the norm for non diabetic cats.

And then some cats are sensitive to environmental, food, and other changes. A hard poop going out? Numbers rise. A wild animal walked by the window? Numbers rise. Infections and inflammation can cause high numbers.

Bottom line: Cats be cats. :rolleyes:
 
Overall the numbers are lower, less black numbers, but still too high. Youre due for a dose increase.
I'm planning on going up to 5.5 at tomorrow's PM shot. Gotta plan the increases around my days off work so I can monitor.
 
Your premise would be correct if you were dealing with a medication like an antibiotic. Insulin is a hormone. It's action is influenced by any number of factor such as your cat's activity level, stress (or lack thereof) since stress hormones are steroids which cause an increase in BG number, time of day since there is diurnal variation in stress hormones, your cat's weight, food (and sometimes the manufacturers change the carb levels and don't tell us), variation in a cat's routine, other cats, etc.

In other words, you may be doing exactly the same thing day in and day out and your cat's numbers are widely different. It a cat or a squirrel wanders into your yard, it may cause a rise in stress hormones and Max's numbers go up. If he eats less, his numbers may go down.

Like Crista said, some of the variation you're seeing may be a result of bouncing. If Max's body has gotten used to higher numbers, any time numbers drop low, drop fast, or simply drop into a range that's lower than what he's used to, a stored form of glucose along with counterregulatory hormones (i.e., steroids) are released which cause numbers to rise. It can take 3 days for a bounce to clear.
 
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