Martha
Been thinking about you this week. I haven't had much time to pop on so have not read back all your threads and only glanced through this one without reading everything. So please forgive me if any of this is repetitive.
So many things were mentioned the other night that may have gotten lost in shuffle with all that was going on with Lolly's low numbers. She was low, but not hypo. The bad thing was she wouldn't eat.
I know i mentioned this but think it's key that you try out a bunch of varieties & flavors of LC to find some she loves & cannot refuse that you can count on her to eat. AND also pick up some cans of MC (11-14% or so) and HC (15-24%+) any of the ones of Dr. Lisa's list. I linked you this already and am sure others have as well, but did you get a chance to look over
catinfo.org? it is the bible for the nutrition part of this. Check out diabetes page, the food charts...select anything under 10% for LC, some FF grilled or gravy lovers for HC, and whatever else looks appealing from the list to try out. Mark the MC/ & HC with a marker and keep them separate so you know.
I have worried she is not eating often enough. I am not sure what total amounts she is getting, but they really should be spread out over the day, and she needs to be fed near or soon after shot time. I think you are still feeding at +9 but not after? It may help to add the feeding times and amounts to your SS, many do this. You can add to the column squares, or over in comments on the right. It's part of the puzzle and will help those guiding you to be able to see the food and amounts in relation to numbers. She dropped like a rock the other nite because she just had no food on board. And hopefully she will eat the HC gravy...most go gaga over it. you could try out a teensie bit to see.
I see you added AlphaTrak to your signature, GREAT..can you also add it to your SPREADSHEET? You probably notice most here use human meters, so the ranges are different and the numbers mean different things, with accordingly different actions or suggestions to be made. So that distinction is VERY important. You asked about saving money, I think this is a BIG way for you to save. Biggest expense for FD is really in the strips. I am sure several human meters were recommended, (lots of folks use the Relion
Micro or Confirm- NO PRIME!- cheap strips and easy to access) If you do swtich we will want to make that clear also, so the advice is geared accordingly.
Also I am sure you hear buying the pens ends up more cost effective than vials. But those are your only real expenses.
Basically the issue the other night was you had no IDEA that you were shooting such a low number. You shot 1.5U into what in human meters is a 40! Most of even the most seasoned would not shoot that low. But in the end she mostly surfed all night.
Your vet telling you to shoot 100 is like us shooting a 65 in human meter. Many here would shoot a 65, but that would be after having lots of experience and data to know how your kitty responds. Once you work your way down in dose, it is not as scary shooting 1/4U into a 65. But is fairly daring to have a vet advise a newbie to do that. If it were a human meter 100, even that is considered a bit low to shoot as a newbie around here. We start at 'ask for help if below 150' around here. Then gradually work your no shoot number down. Eventually it is true you want to shoot low to stay low, you just don't start there. I would just keep posting your number here a little before shot time, and get feedback for now, then as you ease into it a bit you will more easily be able to have a sense of what to do.
I definately think she is responding well to the insulin, and you are right to want to keep her consistent and not skip shots. The key is finding the right dose that you can shoot twice per day, one that does not take her too low. That is where the nadir test come in and why they are so important.
Your vet on the one had is somewhat progressive in her attempts at TR, but pieces really seem to still be off. Lollys dose was raised too high. And forgive if this has already been mentioned, but cats who get in-office glucose curves are typically stressed and their numbers reflect that. They can spike sometimes 100-150 pts or more, so inherently the curves done there are not providing accurate reliable numbers. Kitty tests 400 at a moment in time at the vet, but might test 150 at your house. Dose adjustments get made on these artificially inflated numbers, on top of which vets tend to raise in whole U vs. smaller increments like we do here. So THAT is why we see so many kitties over dose, some way over, many bouncing, etc. Yes Lolly is responding well to insulin, but she was on way too high a dose by the time we found you. Had she started at 1U as many kitties here do, then you would have methodically worked her either up 1/4U at a time, or down, depending on what numbers she threw you as per the protocol. SO she is coming down the ladder quickly, but because she was already doubled in dose before we found you, it was more like a re-set that needed to happen. Hank was on 1U to start and after a couple of low numbers and BCS doses, that lower amount became our new dose and next thing you know it stuck and he was working his way down the ladder until he was weening off then OTJ. That is how it happens. It can be a lot to stay on top of when they are flying down the ladder like that, but the payoff is great. Not every night is like the one we had with you, but there can be some as they begin to make progress.
If you can make the food connection part, and we get Lolly on her correct dose, it may be you are not doing this for long. I know it feels crazy with your schedule which is a challenge and we need to help you figure out how to work it, but I have a feeling Lolly is going to do really well.
FYI you would need to test whether TR or not to keep her safe and know how a given dose of insulin is responding, the only thing that changes is the levels at which you increase/reduce doses on other protocol.
You pretty much got trial by fire learning to test, so I imagine it is getting much easier and by now her ears have learned to bleed. Hopefully with that confidence your husband will see it is not that big a deal and be willing to at least learn and help pinch hit here and there. It actually could be the perfect solution to your odd schedule, as it seems he can be there on those times your are not.
Sorry for the long post...I need to find your threads from before and get caught up on what I may have missed. I just saw you here and had been thinking about you and wanted to check in. You practically became a pro overnight. Ya'll are doing just great! Hope her baby ears are all better, and so sorry about the flu- hope you feel better too!