bigboy said:
Hi Carl,
I am going to set up a spread sheet right now, and also on Sunday I am going to do a full glucose panel. I am doing home testing, twice a day morning and night. On the weekends it would be much easier to do testing during the day as well, however during the week it is difficult to test in the middle of the day. I suppose when I get home from work which is sometimes about an hour before I feed him I can test him then as well.
The vet has given me some articles on food choice, of which I am not so sure of. I think the science M/D really isn't helping much.
After getting the glucose panel this weekend, we are going to see if we need to adjust his insulin, which is looks like we should.
We did have him on a raw diet, but as said before it was very frowned upon. We wanted to get him away from canned food and dry food. The dry food is completely out of his diet as of now, however we are experimenting with science m/d.
We do have ketone strips that I am going to start using. I wanted some advice on that as well. I have never really tested his ketones at home. How should I go about doing this?
Thank you very much for your advise and response! I appreciate all of this very much. I'm going to create a spreadsheet right now and will post back soon. Thank you again.
Sincerely,
Kelly & Big boy :smile:
Hi Kelly,
Welcome to FDMB. You will not need to go to any other site for help.
I don't know if anyone has explained the questions asked earlier of the insulin used and the current diet..... your first post had no mention of diet or insulin. Also, several members on this board may know of DCIN, but are not frequent visitors to DCIN and are not aware of all the cats who are helped by DCIN.
So, for the diet, I would return ALL the vet food, and you can take a copy of info about food to the vet from Dr. Lisa Pierson, her site is
http://www.catinfo.org/ ... I am sure that your vet will learn a great deal of info, including the value of the raw diet for cats. DRY food is the last thing to feed a diabetic cat and that alone tells me your vet knows nothing about nutrition and little about treating diabetic cats. Sadly, you WERE feeding your cat well on a raw diet, check on the recipe, etc on Dr. Lisa's site, but your vet had you put your cat on a poorer diet. On Dr. Lisa's site, she has a huge list of many foods with info that she had gathered and compiled after hundreds of hours contacting pet food companies. She knows her food.
For the insulin, because there are different insulins which have different reactions and methods by which dosing is done, it was an important question to ask you. I have not used all the insulins, so I would have more to say about the ones I have used. Lantus is one of the insulins I have used, so I am sure that others before me have already mentioned that dosing is best based on nadir.
Curve showing reaction of insulin
Example of a typical curve:
+0 - PreShot number.
+1 – Usually higher than PreShot number because of the last shot wearing off. May see a food spike in this number.
+2 - Often similar to the PreShot number.
+3 - Lower than the PreShot number, onset has started.
+4 - Lower.
+5 - Lower.
+6 – Nadir/Peak (the lowest number of cycle).
+7 - Surf (hang around the nadir number).
+8 - Slight rise.
+9 - Slight rise.
+10 - Rising.
+11 - Rising (may dip around +10 or +11).
+12 - PreShot number.
So you can see from the above that it's great to know BG at the time of shots to know it's safe to give a shot, but it's also important to know what's going on in the middle.... is Big Boy dropping too low and then bouncing up higher, is he coming down nicely and then rising again to the next shot time, or is he just staying flat with no drop in numbers.
By testing along the cycle, the above 3 situations would tell you, ... too much insulin, just enough insulin, or not enough insulin. All 3 situations could give you the same BG numbers at shot time.
Because of the history of DKA, you want to be sure to test Big Boy's urine for ketones daily by using KETOSTIX. It seems that some cats are just more prone to ketones over others.... both of my cats had long stretches of high numbers but never even a trace of ketones, and it is important to know that cats can have ketones even at lower BG numbers, so you will need to be pretty regular with testing Big Boy. You can get a container of the KETOSTIX at any pharmacy.
You can ask any questions you may have because there is nothing you can ask that someone else here has not asked or wondered in the past.
To know the road ahead, ask the man coming back.