Katspaw6 said:
My 15 year old cat was recently diagnosed with diabetes. We are in the phase of finding the right insulin level to control her diabetes. When diagnosed her BG was at 500 - we are now down inthe 250 range - not yet stablized. I go to the Vet weekly until we have been able to get down to the manageable level.
Welcome :smile:
What insulin is your cat on and what dose? There are several insulins that can be used, some better than others.
250s aren't too bad but still not ideal. The levels will come down once you get closer to the right dose :smile:
Are you taking your cat to the vet every week for blood glucose checks? If so, you do't need to do that at all. Many cats get so stressed out at the vet's office that their blood glucose levels skyrocket up really really high which may lead the vet to increase the amount of insulin. Not to mention it costs $$$. Regulating your cat's diabetes happens at home, not at the vet's office. You can test your cat's blood glucose levels at home using a Human diabetic blood glucose meter. You take a teeny drop of blood from the ear or a paw pad. Here is more info:
http://www.felinediabetes.com/FDMB/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=287 You don't need the vet's permission to test your cat at home. Most people here just send their vet an email with their cat's blood glucose levels and work out treatment from that.
I have four other cats and have transitioned them all over to an all canned food diet (Wellness) and am having some difficulty with them always being hungry
Wellness is good, just make sure that you are feeding the ones that are grain-free. It will say grain free on the label. The new gravy/cubed/etc ones and the pouches are too high in carbs for your diabetic.
How much food are you feeding?
Your diabetic will always be hungry becaues the blood glucose levels are so high. What most people here do is free feed the canned food using a timed feeder. Not sure how this will work for a multi-cat household. A 5 oz can of food per day for your diabetic is probably enough but feed more or less.
They used to get a little dry food at the end of the day - and they really seem to miss this. Is there any type of dry food that would be Okay to give to my diabetic kitty in a small amount? or do I just need to be patient while they all adjust. We are in week four now and it does not seem to be getting any better.
Give your cats time to get over no more dry food :smile: There are some grain free low carb dry foods but they are all not good for a diabetic cat to have. All dry foods contain some kind of starch to hold the pieces together. Some diabetic cats are so carb sensitive that even a few pieces of dry food can shoot blood glucose levels up really high.
Maybe to keep the non-diabetic cats happy, you can feed them a low carb dry food as treats. Keep your diabetic away from the dry food. Or just feed all the cats a low carb crunchy treat:
http://www.felinediabetes.com/FDMB/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=9172