Fluffykittycat
Member Since 2019
Hello,
My lovely cat, Lily (Russian Blue), was diagnosed with diabetes in January of last year. We received some not great vet advice- no need for insulin just change her diet-which subsequently resulted in Lily getting really sick and starting to show problems on bloodwork with lipidosis flags.
We found a new vet who had a stronger approach to treatment-insulin plus diet change. To make a long story short, we also discovered that Lily is allergic to most cat food. She now has access throughout the day to Royal Canin dry Hypoallergenic food and eats Fancy Feast canned food. We seem to go along really well until something else happens and it is starting to take it's toll on both of us.
I do weekly spot testing of her blood glucose since I live rurally and getting the little test strips is not that easy. What I was noticing about the spot testing is that she was starting to climb up in numbers again. The vet, through email, advised that I increase her dosage but she suddenly experienced a low (hit a 2 on the Alpha Track machine). Weeks went by and the numbers climbed again. I took her in to the vet to get checked out after I also noticed that her back legs seemed shaky and she wasn't jumping as much.
The bloodwork came back with her improving on one of her liver values but still not out of the clear for lipidosis, she may have ketones, and her fructosamine test said she was 624, which the vet described as really bad. Her insulin dose has been increased to 3 units in the morning and 3 at night. I use a Lantus injector pen and she doesn't seem to mind too much having insulin since she also gets a freeze dried turkey treat.
Today is our first attempt at a blood curve and I am already concerned about her numbers. We don't seem to have much of a curve and instead have more of a gentle dip and we are back up to the high numbers again (20.9, 18.3, 20.9). All of those numbers are directly after some morsel of food. My questions for the wonderful people out there are:
How do I know if the high numbers are related to ketones?
Can minor ketones be treated at home?
How quickly do bg values come down after an increase in insulin?
Does the fact that I am bribing her to stay still, with a turkey morsel, artificially increase her values?
I appreciate the help and guidance of the forum as I have been learning a lot about how to help my cat through reading the posts. I'm not finding the treatments very successful and I am very concerned about losing my cat to a disease which should be treatable.
My lovely cat, Lily (Russian Blue), was diagnosed with diabetes in January of last year. We received some not great vet advice- no need for insulin just change her diet-which subsequently resulted in Lily getting really sick and starting to show problems on bloodwork with lipidosis flags.
We found a new vet who had a stronger approach to treatment-insulin plus diet change. To make a long story short, we also discovered that Lily is allergic to most cat food. She now has access throughout the day to Royal Canin dry Hypoallergenic food and eats Fancy Feast canned food. We seem to go along really well until something else happens and it is starting to take it's toll on both of us.
I do weekly spot testing of her blood glucose since I live rurally and getting the little test strips is not that easy. What I was noticing about the spot testing is that she was starting to climb up in numbers again. The vet, through email, advised that I increase her dosage but she suddenly experienced a low (hit a 2 on the Alpha Track machine). Weeks went by and the numbers climbed again. I took her in to the vet to get checked out after I also noticed that her back legs seemed shaky and she wasn't jumping as much.
The bloodwork came back with her improving on one of her liver values but still not out of the clear for lipidosis, she may have ketones, and her fructosamine test said she was 624, which the vet described as really bad. Her insulin dose has been increased to 3 units in the morning and 3 at night. I use a Lantus injector pen and she doesn't seem to mind too much having insulin since she also gets a freeze dried turkey treat.
Today is our first attempt at a blood curve and I am already concerned about her numbers. We don't seem to have much of a curve and instead have more of a gentle dip and we are back up to the high numbers again (20.9, 18.3, 20.9). All of those numbers are directly after some morsel of food. My questions for the wonderful people out there are:
How do I know if the high numbers are related to ketones?
Can minor ketones be treated at home?
How quickly do bg values come down after an increase in insulin?
Does the fact that I am bribing her to stay still, with a turkey morsel, artificially increase her values?
I appreciate the help and guidance of the forum as I have been learning a lot about how to help my cat through reading the posts. I'm not finding the treatments very successful and I am very concerned about losing my cat to a disease which should be treatable.