SallyBrighton
Member
Hi, I am in the UK and my 11 year old cat was diagnosed with Diabetes last Friday and my mind and emotions have been on red alert ever since trying to gather the fortitude to inject her, observe what I am meant to be observing and learn all I can, all with the awareness that it seems I cannot know what will happen - in a way! This period of stabilising is a little like diving into an ocean and not even knowing where I am headed and what to look out for as good signposts or bad ones!
I have gleaned lots of information from these boards and for now am just trying to get to grips with injecting. Ellie has never been a lap cat, she is part siamese and fairly wiley and does things on her own terms. I am having terrible trouble doing the injection. Any ideas? The vet suggested meal times, we have a long acting insulin (insuvet pro zinc?) and are trying once a day at 6pm. Well it was 6.15 the first day, 7.15 the next and not trying to edge back to 6pm again! We have been advised not to change the food at the moment. She wont let me come up behind her when she is eating, she bolts her food anyway and head bobs about. For now one of us tempts her with small bits of food as she slowly follows the trail, my partner gives her the shot! As you can imagine this is not ideal long term. I dont think it hurts, she just hates people coming up behind her, thoughts please, will she get used to it?
AS others are, I am worried about hypoglacemia and watching her like a hawk and wondering if she will have fainted in the night! A little dramatic as within 24hrs of her first insulin shot she was like a different cat, truely amazing and weird at the same time.She stopped scavenging for food - this happened in the week before I took her to the vets, her obsession with the kitchen tap has stopped and urination in the litter tray is almost half the amount by the looks. I am wondering if we would now by now if the 2 units we are giving are too much - i.e she seems fine for the three days we have been giving it, would we perhaps know by now? I think the answer to that is no as if she excersises more or not eat as much things change - is this right - I am just trying to work out if there is a "likely" time for a hypo if one was to happen - I am sure I will relax in time, its just a lot to take on.
thanks for reading, I am going to take each day as it comes, but heartened to see such a change in her in such a short time.
Sally
I have gleaned lots of information from these boards and for now am just trying to get to grips with injecting. Ellie has never been a lap cat, she is part siamese and fairly wiley and does things on her own terms. I am having terrible trouble doing the injection. Any ideas? The vet suggested meal times, we have a long acting insulin (insuvet pro zinc?) and are trying once a day at 6pm. Well it was 6.15 the first day, 7.15 the next and not trying to edge back to 6pm again! We have been advised not to change the food at the moment. She wont let me come up behind her when she is eating, she bolts her food anyway and head bobs about. For now one of us tempts her with small bits of food as she slowly follows the trail, my partner gives her the shot! As you can imagine this is not ideal long term. I dont think it hurts, she just hates people coming up behind her, thoughts please, will she get used to it?
AS others are, I am worried about hypoglacemia and watching her like a hawk and wondering if she will have fainted in the night! A little dramatic as within 24hrs of her first insulin shot she was like a different cat, truely amazing and weird at the same time.She stopped scavenging for food - this happened in the week before I took her to the vets, her obsession with the kitchen tap has stopped and urination in the litter tray is almost half the amount by the looks. I am wondering if we would now by now if the 2 units we are giving are too much - i.e she seems fine for the three days we have been giving it, would we perhaps know by now? I think the answer to that is no as if she excersises more or not eat as much things change - is this right - I am just trying to work out if there is a "likely" time for a hypo if one was to happen - I am sure I will relax in time, its just a lot to take on.
thanks for reading, I am going to take each day as it comes, but heartened to see such a change in her in such a short time.
Sally