Riyah
Member Since 2023
Hi everyone!
First off, so happy this place exists. I've already learned a lot from the threads I've browsed. Feel free to read this all or just skip to my questions at the bottom if you'd like! I'll bold them to make them easier to see.
A week ago today, my family's cat Lily was diagnosed with diabetes, which came with a lot of guilt, anxiety, and sadness over how this happened. She lives with my parents while I live about an hours flight away, but come home often and take care of all of her health issues and vet visits. We video chat often and noticed two weeks ago that she was drinking a lot of water and seemed generally uncomfortable. I flew back last Wednesday and immediately noticed that she looked ragged and lost weight. She was now about 9.5 lbs from her usual 11.2.
Luckily we had a cat vet visit already scheduled for the next day, which was supposed to be a follow up after a different health scare during the summer (repeated diarrhea that lasted for about a month but resolved on its own). After describing the symptoms, the vet did a physical check up and very strongly suspected diabetes. They ran bloodwork and urine - BG was 463 mg/dl and fructosamine was 433. The vet also mentioned ketosis (maybe not the right term) but after examining the urine, said ketones weren't found in her urine, just her blood, which I guess was a "positive?" This terminology is all so new to me! She did however have a lot of bacteria in her urine, e.coli specifically, so she was prescribed amoxicillin. She's been having that am/pm in liquid form. However, it's so sweet smelling, I'm curious if that impacts her numbers at all.
We got sent home with Prozinc, syringes, and a recommendation to purchase the AlphaTrak3, which I ordered that day. We were told 1 unit every 12 hours. Amazon had a delay in shipments so it didn't arrive til Monday (11/6) evening. Since arriving, I've tested before each shot, although, I didn't realize til yesterday that I should test before she eats. The vet also mentioned only shooting if her BG was above 250. You can see in the spreadsheet what the numbers were, but for two of those times, I didn't give her any insulin. I gave all of the updated readings so far to my vet, and he said we could do a more refined dosing, so .5u if BG is above 200 but below 250, and 1u if above 250.
Now for food. She previously would free feed from dry food all day, with on serving of wet food for dinner, mixed in with Proviable DC as her probiotic (started during her diarrhea woes). She'd also get a lot of Temptations treats, about 10 a day max. She hasn't had any dry food or treats since last Friday 11/3, and I'm actively trying to find a good low carb high protein pate for her to switch to. We tried the Tiki Luau pate and she doesn't even recognize it as food. So, for now, I've been mixing about 1-2 teaspoons of her favorite Sheba Perfect Portions to trick her into eating the pate. That's been working but definitely isn't a long term solve.
Questions!
1. Diet - Does anyone have recommendations for pate foods that are smelly and enticing? I know Fancy Feast Classics are the recommended starting foods here, but I'd like to try some others with slightly better nutrition before going to FF. I have a feeling she'd like the FF so would rather keep it as a backup. And with figuring out nutrition, should I be looking at the protein/carb percentages with moisture included? Or the dry matter numbers? I'm reading that food should have protein % above 40 and carbs % below 10 - are those numbers for dry or with moisture? I've looked at so many food spreadsheets at this point and it's really overwhelming!
Also, does anyone have recommendations on treats? She really loved Temptations and I want to find a replacement for her that she's excited by. The vet recommended freeze dried proteins, but she won't even look at them!
Are there recommended supplements? She seems to be prone to UTIs and I also want to make sure I'm helping her any way I can. I read about one on a thread here that was for UTI prevention but can't recall the name.
2. Testing - I've noticed in other spreadsheets that people test quite frequently, sometimes every hour, rather than just twice with each shot. Is there a reason for doing that regularly? Rather than doing it every once in a while? I know it makes sense for a curve, but doing it on a day to day seems like a lot. The process is pretty stressful and I really hate poking her so would love to test the right amount of times but not go overboard and stress her out. It's also expensive! We've already gone through so many lancet needles and I know the test strips are expensive too, although we should be covered on those for a bit.
3. Remission - I don't want to expect that this will happen but of course it would be the best case scenario. Our vet mentioned Lantus vs Prozinc at the time of our visit, but I was so overwhelmed with the info, I didn't fully hear or understand that Lantus has a better chance for remission. We have a follow up on 11/22, is it worth asking if we should switch? Her water consumption has definitely gone down and she's been looking a little better, so the doctor said that's a sign the Prozinc is working, I'm just getting paranoid and want to do the absolute best for her.
Like I said above, I don't actually live with her full time, just when I visit my parents, although I do tend so stay for really long periods of time because luckily I WFH. So I've cancelled my original flight to go back and am committed to getting her regulated and healthy, fingers crossed.
First off, so happy this place exists. I've already learned a lot from the threads I've browsed. Feel free to read this all or just skip to my questions at the bottom if you'd like! I'll bold them to make them easier to see.
A week ago today, my family's cat Lily was diagnosed with diabetes, which came with a lot of guilt, anxiety, and sadness over how this happened. She lives with my parents while I live about an hours flight away, but come home often and take care of all of her health issues and vet visits. We video chat often and noticed two weeks ago that she was drinking a lot of water and seemed generally uncomfortable. I flew back last Wednesday and immediately noticed that she looked ragged and lost weight. She was now about 9.5 lbs from her usual 11.2.
Luckily we had a cat vet visit already scheduled for the next day, which was supposed to be a follow up after a different health scare during the summer (repeated diarrhea that lasted for about a month but resolved on its own). After describing the symptoms, the vet did a physical check up and very strongly suspected diabetes. They ran bloodwork and urine - BG was 463 mg/dl and fructosamine was 433. The vet also mentioned ketosis (maybe not the right term) but after examining the urine, said ketones weren't found in her urine, just her blood, which I guess was a "positive?" This terminology is all so new to me! She did however have a lot of bacteria in her urine, e.coli specifically, so she was prescribed amoxicillin. She's been having that am/pm in liquid form. However, it's so sweet smelling, I'm curious if that impacts her numbers at all.
We got sent home with Prozinc, syringes, and a recommendation to purchase the AlphaTrak3, which I ordered that day. We were told 1 unit every 12 hours. Amazon had a delay in shipments so it didn't arrive til Monday (11/6) evening. Since arriving, I've tested before each shot, although, I didn't realize til yesterday that I should test before she eats. The vet also mentioned only shooting if her BG was above 250. You can see in the spreadsheet what the numbers were, but for two of those times, I didn't give her any insulin. I gave all of the updated readings so far to my vet, and he said we could do a more refined dosing, so .5u if BG is above 200 but below 250, and 1u if above 250.
Now for food. She previously would free feed from dry food all day, with on serving of wet food for dinner, mixed in with Proviable DC as her probiotic (started during her diarrhea woes). She'd also get a lot of Temptations treats, about 10 a day max. She hasn't had any dry food or treats since last Friday 11/3, and I'm actively trying to find a good low carb high protein pate for her to switch to. We tried the Tiki Luau pate and she doesn't even recognize it as food. So, for now, I've been mixing about 1-2 teaspoons of her favorite Sheba Perfect Portions to trick her into eating the pate. That's been working but definitely isn't a long term solve.
Questions!
1. Diet - Does anyone have recommendations for pate foods that are smelly and enticing? I know Fancy Feast Classics are the recommended starting foods here, but I'd like to try some others with slightly better nutrition before going to FF. I have a feeling she'd like the FF so would rather keep it as a backup. And with figuring out nutrition, should I be looking at the protein/carb percentages with moisture included? Or the dry matter numbers? I'm reading that food should have protein % above 40 and carbs % below 10 - are those numbers for dry or with moisture? I've looked at so many food spreadsheets at this point and it's really overwhelming!
Also, does anyone have recommendations on treats? She really loved Temptations and I want to find a replacement for her that she's excited by. The vet recommended freeze dried proteins, but she won't even look at them!
Are there recommended supplements? She seems to be prone to UTIs and I also want to make sure I'm helping her any way I can. I read about one on a thread here that was for UTI prevention but can't recall the name.
2. Testing - I've noticed in other spreadsheets that people test quite frequently, sometimes every hour, rather than just twice with each shot. Is there a reason for doing that regularly? Rather than doing it every once in a while? I know it makes sense for a curve, but doing it on a day to day seems like a lot. The process is pretty stressful and I really hate poking her so would love to test the right amount of times but not go overboard and stress her out. It's also expensive! We've already gone through so many lancet needles and I know the test strips are expensive too, although we should be covered on those for a bit.
3. Remission - I don't want to expect that this will happen but of course it would be the best case scenario. Our vet mentioned Lantus vs Prozinc at the time of our visit, but I was so overwhelmed with the info, I didn't fully hear or understand that Lantus has a better chance for remission. We have a follow up on 11/22, is it worth asking if we should switch? Her water consumption has definitely gone down and she's been looking a little better, so the doctor said that's a sign the Prozinc is working, I'm just getting paranoid and want to do the absolute best for her.
Like I said above, I don't actually live with her full time, just when I visit my parents, although I do tend so stay for really long periods of time because luckily I WFH. So I've cancelled my original flight to go back and am committed to getting her regulated and healthy, fingers crossed.
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