Lana and Elliott (GA)
Member
I'm Alannah - my friends call me Lana - and my diabetic kitty is 13-year-old Elliott. He was diagnosed on May 15 and is on Lantus.
He had gone from an obese 18 pounds to a scrawny 8.9 pounds in an alarmingly short period of time. I've lost beloved kitties to renal failure at ages anywhere from 5 to 15 - I've never had a cat who lived to be older than 15. So I took him for a complete geriatric panel with a heavy heart, expecting that verdict.
When the vet called and told me Elliott is diabetic, at first I was happy and relieved to not have heard the words "kidney disease." Then I started to freak out when I digested the fact that he would need insulin shots twice a day. My fears were calmed when a vet assistant showed me with saline how to give Elliott his injection, then she let me give him a real one. He hardly seemed to feel it! The injections are going well.
The hard part has turned out to be putting the kitties on a regulated feeding schedule. I have 2 civvies, 12-year-old Alannah Jr. (aka A.J.) and 11-year-old Jake. A.J. has pancreatitis, so all my cats get her prescription food - Hill's Feline I/D, both canned and dry. Fortunately, the vet said it's OK to keep Elliott on I/D as long as he does well on it. At first they were NOT happy about no longer being able to free-feed, but they're getting used to a schedule. I plan to slowly get away from the dry food and go primarily to the canned.
I took Elliott to have his glucose checked this past Monday. His blood sugar was at 463, so the vet upped the dose of Lantus from 1 unit to 2. He wants to check again in a couple of weeks.
I found this place the night Elliott was diagnosed, as I was Googling for info on feline diabetes. I'm so happy to be here. This place has already been more helpful and given me more info than Elliott's own vet. I'm very happy to be here!
He had gone from an obese 18 pounds to a scrawny 8.9 pounds in an alarmingly short period of time. I've lost beloved kitties to renal failure at ages anywhere from 5 to 15 - I've never had a cat who lived to be older than 15. So I took him for a complete geriatric panel with a heavy heart, expecting that verdict.
When the vet called and told me Elliott is diabetic, at first I was happy and relieved to not have heard the words "kidney disease." Then I started to freak out when I digested the fact that he would need insulin shots twice a day. My fears were calmed when a vet assistant showed me with saline how to give Elliott his injection, then she let me give him a real one. He hardly seemed to feel it! The injections are going well.
The hard part has turned out to be putting the kitties on a regulated feeding schedule. I have 2 civvies, 12-year-old Alannah Jr. (aka A.J.) and 11-year-old Jake. A.J. has pancreatitis, so all my cats get her prescription food - Hill's Feline I/D, both canned and dry. Fortunately, the vet said it's OK to keep Elliott on I/D as long as he does well on it. At first they were NOT happy about no longer being able to free-feed, but they're getting used to a schedule. I plan to slowly get away from the dry food and go primarily to the canned.
I took Elliott to have his glucose checked this past Monday. His blood sugar was at 463, so the vet upped the dose of Lantus from 1 unit to 2. He wants to check again in a couple of weeks.
I found this place the night Elliott was diagnosed, as I was Googling for info on feline diabetes. I'm so happy to be here. This place has already been more helpful and given me more info than Elliott's own vet. I'm very happy to be here!