Akelly
New Member
Hello,
My name is Alexis and I live in Maryland (US). One of my kitties, Winnie (spayed female, 11 y.o), was diagnosed with diabetes a little over a week ago.
She was put on Lantus, 2 units which I give at 7:30 am/pm. She had two curves last week at the vet’s office.
I’ve been reading all the information on this site and have made some changes based on all I’ve read. I’ve started Win on a low-carb wet only diet (she was on wet/dry before). However, I have been free choicing it for her right now because I did not yet have my glucometer and I was concerned about her glucose dipping low and me not being able to tell. She is ravenous all the time, and has lost weight and muscle mass (which is what prompted me to bring her into the vet.)
Although I requested a meter from the site that has the free newbie kits, I did it late in the game and it didn’t arrive today (and I have to curve Win tomorrow), so I went out and purchased a Relion meter at Walmart (and I will certainly send back the free meter that is on its way, and thank you so much!) I was so glad to see that Relion was only $9.00. I had it in my head it would be much more expensive.
As soon as I got home I tested Winnie. I got blood first try, and her value at 4:51pm was 44 mg/dl. Since I don’t have the curve results from my vet from last week (but have requested them) I have no idea what her values were pre/post insulin. I thought that might be a little low, so I gave her some chicken breast, which she gobbled up. I am going to check her level again just before her 7:30pm insulin injection, and then check through the evening.
Here are my questions (and if I should post these over on the Lantus board, please let me know.) I know some of the answers may be in all the FAQ information, but I’ve read so much in the past week that I think my head is swimming a little.
*how long before the insulin injection do you do your glucose pretest?
*for a cat not yet regulated, is it OK to let them have access to their food all day, or should you always check glucose, then decide if they should get a snack between their morning and evening meal?
*do they begin to gain weight and does their ravenous appetite get less ravenous as they begin to be more regulated in their levels?
*when I test Winnie again before her 7:30pm insulin, what level would be a red flag to me that perhaps her injection should be modified?
*is there any calibration difference between the glucometers for humans, vs. those for pets?
I have begun Winnie’s spreadsheet and will start to fill in her values as time passes. I’ve looked at several of the list members' SS, and I thought I was getting the hang of understanding what it is I need to look for (as far as what the glucose levels mean), but then I get myself confused because I think I’m over-thinking things. I’m hoping as I get the hang of doing everything, I’ll get my head around how the chart values should look.
Thank you for your help!
Alexis
My name is Alexis and I live in Maryland (US). One of my kitties, Winnie (spayed female, 11 y.o), was diagnosed with diabetes a little over a week ago.
She was put on Lantus, 2 units which I give at 7:30 am/pm. She had two curves last week at the vet’s office.
I’ve been reading all the information on this site and have made some changes based on all I’ve read. I’ve started Win on a low-carb wet only diet (she was on wet/dry before). However, I have been free choicing it for her right now because I did not yet have my glucometer and I was concerned about her glucose dipping low and me not being able to tell. She is ravenous all the time, and has lost weight and muscle mass (which is what prompted me to bring her into the vet.)
Although I requested a meter from the site that has the free newbie kits, I did it late in the game and it didn’t arrive today (and I have to curve Win tomorrow), so I went out and purchased a Relion meter at Walmart (and I will certainly send back the free meter that is on its way, and thank you so much!) I was so glad to see that Relion was only $9.00. I had it in my head it would be much more expensive.
As soon as I got home I tested Winnie. I got blood first try, and her value at 4:51pm was 44 mg/dl. Since I don’t have the curve results from my vet from last week (but have requested them) I have no idea what her values were pre/post insulin. I thought that might be a little low, so I gave her some chicken breast, which she gobbled up. I am going to check her level again just before her 7:30pm insulin injection, and then check through the evening.
Here are my questions (and if I should post these over on the Lantus board, please let me know.) I know some of the answers may be in all the FAQ information, but I’ve read so much in the past week that I think my head is swimming a little.
*how long before the insulin injection do you do your glucose pretest?
*for a cat not yet regulated, is it OK to let them have access to their food all day, or should you always check glucose, then decide if they should get a snack between their morning and evening meal?
*do they begin to gain weight and does their ravenous appetite get less ravenous as they begin to be more regulated in their levels?
*when I test Winnie again before her 7:30pm insulin, what level would be a red flag to me that perhaps her injection should be modified?
*is there any calibration difference between the glucometers for humans, vs. those for pets?
I have begun Winnie’s spreadsheet and will start to fill in her values as time passes. I’ve looked at several of the list members' SS, and I thought I was getting the hang of understanding what it is I need to look for (as far as what the glucose levels mean), but then I get myself confused because I think I’m over-thinking things. I’m hoping as I get the hang of doing everything, I’ll get my head around how the chart values should look.
Thank you for your help!
Alexis