OUR SITUATION:
My cat Lamborghini is a 12 year old male. He is not definitively diagnosed as diabetic, but the vet says it is probable, as his glucose level was 240, and a couple of years ago there was a result that was also a bit higher than should be.
However, along with the diabetes possibility, his bloodwork showed he is severely hyperthyroid. His bloodwork showed a T4 of 14.4. We only found all this out yesterday. Vet has given us medicine for that (the gel stuff that goes in his ear) and a bag of insanely priced Purina DM food, dry, and told us to use Fancy Feast Classics for wet food. His kidney tests look fine, his liver tests show some that are somewhat high. But from what I read, hyperthyroid can artificially elevate liver tests, and suppress signs of kidney damage, so we can't trust either yet.
A few years ago Lambors had one episode of urinary tract sludge, and we were told to put him on the Purina UM food. He has been fine since then.
We have another cat, Ferrari, a 12 year old female. Both cats have dry food available at all times, and get a portion of wet food twice a day, at the same time our two dogs get breakfast and dinner. Dry food is in a cage with a cat-sized entrance, to keep the dogs from it, tho one dog is somehow able to make herself amazingly cat-sized when she really wants to (she's 17 inches tall at the shoulder, weighs 33 pounds, but with a skinny build can somehow squeeze herself through a cat door when she wants to). Wet food is given in the kitchen, right at our feet, so we can guard them from the dogs.
THE QUESTIONS
Just recently I have learned just how awful dry food is for cats. Three previous cats, over the years, each lived to 19 years old on just plain, cheap, grocery store, dry cat food, with no problems, so we never thought twice about it. Now I have a severely ill cat, who happens to be my son's most precious pet (of all the animals in our house, it HAS to be this one!) and we have to figure this out, quickly. But I'm not sure radical food changes are a good idea right now, until we get his thyroid under control.
So...I need suggestions for an acceptable dry food (for now, while we work on stabilizing things) that doesn't cost more than the food we feed the people in the house. That Purina DM cost us $60 for 10 pounds, that's insane!! Especially because, as I read the label, it has corn gluten meal and corn starch in it! And the "meat" is poultry by product meal! Cheap fillers, and bad carbs, so how do they justify $6 per pound for it? Can someone recommend something better, or at least equivalent but cheaper?
I know we need to get the cats off dry food. It's just going to take time, since we have the thyroid issues to deal with, and then the logistics of two dogs vs deliciously smelly wet cat food.
What about this one?
Nutrisca Grain-Free Chicken Recipe Dry Cat Food ( https://www.chewy.com/nutrisca-grain-free-chicken-recipe/dp/51875 ) From what I read there in the ingredients, it seems like it would be better than the Purina DM, and the price is certainly good. It says it's low glycemic index food, is that true, or are they just throwing out buzzwords to make a sale?
How do you tell the carbohydrate content of cat food? They don't list it. Is there a way to calculate it? Does the glycemic index thing matter at all, or not really?
Healthwise--could the high blood sugar reading be a result of the hyperthyroid condition? Reading about how that can change liver results and hide kidney problems, I wonder what else might settle down, or kick up, as we change his thyroid function back towards normal. We will still be changing diet, as better safe than sorry, and clearly he does not have a strong physiology going on here. Just wondering what to expect, as being hit with all this news yesterday was quite the shock, we had brought him in because we thought maybe he just had a urinary issue again.
My cat Lamborghini is a 12 year old male. He is not definitively diagnosed as diabetic, but the vet says it is probable, as his glucose level was 240, and a couple of years ago there was a result that was also a bit higher than should be.
However, along with the diabetes possibility, his bloodwork showed he is severely hyperthyroid. His bloodwork showed a T4 of 14.4. We only found all this out yesterday. Vet has given us medicine for that (the gel stuff that goes in his ear) and a bag of insanely priced Purina DM food, dry, and told us to use Fancy Feast Classics for wet food. His kidney tests look fine, his liver tests show some that are somewhat high. But from what I read, hyperthyroid can artificially elevate liver tests, and suppress signs of kidney damage, so we can't trust either yet.
A few years ago Lambors had one episode of urinary tract sludge, and we were told to put him on the Purina UM food. He has been fine since then.
We have another cat, Ferrari, a 12 year old female. Both cats have dry food available at all times, and get a portion of wet food twice a day, at the same time our two dogs get breakfast and dinner. Dry food is in a cage with a cat-sized entrance, to keep the dogs from it, tho one dog is somehow able to make herself amazingly cat-sized when she really wants to (she's 17 inches tall at the shoulder, weighs 33 pounds, but with a skinny build can somehow squeeze herself through a cat door when she wants to). Wet food is given in the kitchen, right at our feet, so we can guard them from the dogs.
THE QUESTIONS
Just recently I have learned just how awful dry food is for cats. Three previous cats, over the years, each lived to 19 years old on just plain, cheap, grocery store, dry cat food, with no problems, so we never thought twice about it. Now I have a severely ill cat, who happens to be my son's most precious pet (of all the animals in our house, it HAS to be this one!) and we have to figure this out, quickly. But I'm not sure radical food changes are a good idea right now, until we get his thyroid under control.
So...I need suggestions for an acceptable dry food (for now, while we work on stabilizing things) that doesn't cost more than the food we feed the people in the house. That Purina DM cost us $60 for 10 pounds, that's insane!! Especially because, as I read the label, it has corn gluten meal and corn starch in it! And the "meat" is poultry by product meal! Cheap fillers, and bad carbs, so how do they justify $6 per pound for it? Can someone recommend something better, or at least equivalent but cheaper?
I know we need to get the cats off dry food. It's just going to take time, since we have the thyroid issues to deal with, and then the logistics of two dogs vs deliciously smelly wet cat food.
What about this one?
Nutrisca Grain-Free Chicken Recipe Dry Cat Food ( https://www.chewy.com/nutrisca-grain-free-chicken-recipe/dp/51875 ) From what I read there in the ingredients, it seems like it would be better than the Purina DM, and the price is certainly good. It says it's low glycemic index food, is that true, or are they just throwing out buzzwords to make a sale?
How do you tell the carbohydrate content of cat food? They don't list it. Is there a way to calculate it? Does the glycemic index thing matter at all, or not really?
Healthwise--could the high blood sugar reading be a result of the hyperthyroid condition? Reading about how that can change liver results and hide kidney problems, I wonder what else might settle down, or kick up, as we change his thyroid function back towards normal. We will still be changing diet, as better safe than sorry, and clearly he does not have a strong physiology going on here. Just wondering what to expect, as being hit with all this news yesterday was quite the shock, we had brought him in because we thought maybe he just had a urinary issue again.
