Welcome to FDMB!
There is a huge amount to absorb when getting started. However, much of managing your cat's diabetes will become routine.
We do not recommend using the pens to dose insulin for several reasons. You have to prime the pen for every shot. This means you are expelling 1u of insulin every time you have to give your cat a shot. Lantus is too expensive to waste 2 units a day! The pens do not allow you to shoot a dose that is in an increment of less than 1.0. As was mentioned above, we change doses in 0.25u amounts. Increasing a dose by 1.0u means you could miss what is an appropriate dose for your cat or end up overdosing your cat and causing a hypoglycemic event. Alternatively, decreasing the dose by too much will cause numbers to go back into a less than ideal range. One of dosing methods we use, the Tight Regulation Protocol, has been published in a leading veterinary journal documenting its success. The Protocol based its dosing on 0.25u increments.
The Blood Sugar Gold product has been brought up a number of time on the FDMB Facebook group. It promises a lot and delivers very little. Personally, I would not wholly accept the manufacturer as being an objective resource -- it's a conflict of interest. (It's like asking the manufacturer of prescription diabetes foods for their opinion on their product -- they will tell you it's wonderful and never mention that the dry food is about 17% carbohydrate and frankly, not appropriate for a diabetic cat.) It's your choice whether to use the supplement. At the very least, I'd ask a holistic vet who is knowledgeable about homeopathic products for an opinion. Even with humans, herbal supplements can be a problem and can interact with prescription medications and I suspect we know more about humans and herbal supplements than we know with respect to cats.
There is a huge amount to absorb when getting started. However, much of managing your cat's diabetes will become routine.
We do not recommend using the pens to dose insulin for several reasons. You have to prime the pen for every shot. This means you are expelling 1u of insulin every time you have to give your cat a shot. Lantus is too expensive to waste 2 units a day! The pens do not allow you to shoot a dose that is in an increment of less than 1.0. As was mentioned above, we change doses in 0.25u amounts. Increasing a dose by 1.0u means you could miss what is an appropriate dose for your cat or end up overdosing your cat and causing a hypoglycemic event. Alternatively, decreasing the dose by too much will cause numbers to go back into a less than ideal range. One of dosing methods we use, the Tight Regulation Protocol, has been published in a leading veterinary journal documenting its success. The Protocol based its dosing on 0.25u increments.
The Blood Sugar Gold product has been brought up a number of time on the FDMB Facebook group. It promises a lot and delivers very little. Personally, I would not wholly accept the manufacturer as being an objective resource -- it's a conflict of interest. (It's like asking the manufacturer of prescription diabetes foods for their opinion on their product -- they will tell you it's wonderful and never mention that the dry food is about 17% carbohydrate and frankly, not appropriate for a diabetic cat.) It's your choice whether to use the supplement. At the very least, I'd ask a holistic vet who is knowledgeable about homeopathic products for an opinion. Even with humans, herbal supplements can be a problem and can interact with prescription medications and I suspect we know more about humans and herbal supplements than we know with respect to cats.
You are certainly not a moron!