Rob & Harley (GA) said:That's funny. Several years ago we had a member who wrote a blog about her diabetic journey including songs. Her board name was Howdy Girl and she wrote a Christmas song called Oh Pancreas sung to the tune of Oh Tannanbaum. It started out "Oh pancreas, Oh pancreas, why did you have to leave us".
If Floyd keeps climbing up to around 200 you may need to start shooting small doses like .2 or .25 unit as needed to support his pancreas as it is healing when he climbes over 180 to 200.
Rob & Harley (GA) said:Since .5 unit gave him such a long ride I would drop the dose to .2 or .25 unit depending on which syringes you are using. Can you get a few tests in today?
Sue and Oliver (GA) said:Lots of people switch over to U100 needles for the tiny doses. It does require a conversion chart since you are using a U40 insulin with U100 needles. But you can dose .1 and .2 amounts easier. He seems to be heading in the right direction fast (anti jinx) I think I would try to figure out the .25 on your U40 needles. Put some colored water in a syringe, starting with .5. Then squirt out tiny drops till it looks half way between zero and .5 Mark it with tape or permanent marker. This can be your syringe to compare to when you are measuring .25 and your dose will be fairly consistent each time.
Rob & Harley (GA) said:Yikes! Are you sure it was a half of a half?
You may need to switch to the U100 syringes with the half unit markings anyway so you will be able to shoot micro doses with some accuracy.
Did you get nailbite_smile seeing that 37?
Rob & Harley (GA) said:I just went over to Health and read through your thread.
I don't know what a botox syringe is like, does it have half unit markings?
After all the karo and higher carb food he will probably shoot up high at some point. They are much more sensative to insulin after a hypo so I would give him and yourself the night off and don't give any insulin tonight, given his reaction to the .25u, it would be too hard to try to figure out a dose anyway and then let the carbs wear off by themselves. That way we can see where his normal levels are with no insulin and no carbs, if he doesn't shoot up high he may have been going low for a while now.
Good job today.
Carl & Bob said:FF chicken classics is either 3% or 4% carbs, so that's definitely low carb.
Yes, the numbers are only showing the increase that would be caused by low-carb food so you can put more faith in them and not have to wonder if they are due to "extra carbs".
If you withhold food between +10 and PMPS, the number you get will be "food free".
If there are free syringes available in the Supply Closet, I'd definitely go that way instead of using a non-insulin syringe. Even if the botox ones are better marked, unless they are "U40" or "U100" markings, you won't be able to really know if 1 unit equals 1 unit, insulin-wise.
Carl
Botox syringes are divided into tenths
Carl & Bob said:Botox syringes are divided into tenths
Tenths of "what" though? How much does a full syringe hold, ml or cc wise?
Carl
P.S. - 86 is perfect at this point![]()
Clemptor said:Carl & Bob said:Botox syringes are divided into tenths
Tenths of "what" though? How much does a full syringe hold, ml or cc wise?
Carl
P.S. - 86 is perfect at this point![]()
I think it's a hundred cc's, at this rate though I'll be surprised if he needs any in the am. My Mother has been an RN for 30 years, I'll get the right syringe. Hey, think the vet would mind if I took these extra 40's and crammed them up his ass??
Carl & Bob said:Here's what I would try....
You're right, next to nothing dropped him like a rock this morning. He may or may not "bounce" to higher numbers due to the low numbers he had today. From following along in Health, even though you gave low-carb food (good job not carbing him up!), it went on for quite a while with the low numbers, and he was up and down during that time. So you had to "work" to keep him in good numbers.
I see on your SS that you have fed him like 4 or 5 times a day? That's what I think would be a good way to go. If you can give him a half dozen smaller meals during the day and/or night. It might help "bump" his pancreas and convince it to put out small amounts of insulin to fight against the carb boosts from eating. He might continue to go "up and down" over the course of 12 hours, but it will be because his body is trying to self-regulate the way it's supposed to do. And if the numbers stay with the 150 or lower ranges, it should be okay to hold off on insulin and see what he can do on his own.
Have you been testing for ketones using the "dip sticks" at all? If not, it might make sense to invest five bucks or so on a box of keto-stix at the drug store. Test his urine for ketones if you are not going to give insulin, so you don't have to go through the "ketone" nightmare.
Carl
He was 191 this a.m., should I have just fed him and re-tested?
Carl & Bob said:He was 191 this a.m., should I have just fed him and re-tested?
Well, you had no idea this morning that he was going to drop like a rock, right? ;-) But that's exactly the concept. If you see a 191 tomorrow morning or tonight, feed him, then test him a couple hours later to see if his number has dropped lower, with no insulin given.
Usually you'd see an increase between 30-60 minutes after he eats, and then a decrease in BG an hour later if his pancreas is functioning to some degree. I think it probably happens faster than that with a non-diabetic cat, because it's all instinctive and you probably wouldn't even catch it easily on a meter. But if Floyd's BG goes down within an hour or two after a meal, then something's happening right.
Carl
Sue and Oliver (GA) said:What Robin said. :mrgreen: There are some free needles in the supply closet. You need the ones with the half unit markings.