My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabetes..

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Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Over time this word doc could get unwieldy when it gets long and its hard to track trends on it. Deb can you help set up a spreadsheet ?

The spreadsheet terminology
AMPS =a.m. Pre Shot test value
U=dose
+1 is the test reading one hour after the shot, +2 is test after two hours and so on
PMPS = p.m. Pre Shot test value

Wendy
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Thanks for the signature info. That will help us to help you better.

The word document can be used as a stop gap measure. Sort of like having someone post their numbers directly in the thread/topic/post/condo. It will get unwieldy as Wendy said.

As Wendy said, I can help you with your initial setup of our SS template. I even get people started and enter the data they have. Send me a PM if you are interested.

Sorry, we don't have any information on the carb content on that Fussie canned food you mentioned. I did look at the ingredients, and some of them may be ok, some of them look to be too high in carbs. The ones in gravy or sauce have a lot of carb ingredients like Tomato Paste, Carrot, Potato, Tapioca Starch, Green Pea. The ones in Aspic look like they might be ok. I saw some of them with Oligo Sugar in them. I would avoid those, you don't want to give a diabetic cat any food with sugar in it.

I'd look closely at the food labels for those Fussie cat foods and not use any that have any starches (potatoes, green peas, tapioca, wheat, corn, soy, etc), fruits or vegetables, or that Oligo Sugar ingredient. We don't know how much of any of those ingredients are in those foods but you could experiment with them if you wanted to. Or call the manufacturer and request the "as fed" values. we can calculate the carb % by calories with that info.

You could keep any of the gravy/sauce ones in your hypo tool kit, to help bring the BG's up if your cat drops low.
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Can anyone out there tell me the difference between PZI and Lantus? I understand that Lantus has an 84% remission rate but that PZI is harder to get a regulated number without a lot of fine tuning, but is still a good insulin. Libby has successfully been switched to the BFF food for about 3 weeks now and we regularly test before each shot and sometimes mid-day. Her numbers are still all over the place, however today she seems to be holding in the 200s. We had a hypo event last week, so we've reduced her insulin from 4 to 1 and sometimes, if she is in the low 100's in the morning, I'll skip it all together. I'll try to keep up her on line chart if anyone is interested. Thanks!!
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Cats do go into remission on Prozinc. It just take more fine tuning and testing and coming up with an individualized treatment plan for your cat.

Lantus is a depot insulin, Prozinc is not, it's what is known as an in and out insulin. That depot gives Lantus a longer duration 14-20 hours and a flatter smoother curve. Prozinc has a duration of 10-14 hours in most cats. You'll need to discover what the duration is for your cat.

More flexibility in dosing times and dose amounts with Prozinc. Those aspects can work better with some people's full lives and schedules.

Probably one of the differences with Lantus that people have a problem wrapping their heads around, is the dose you give today, you might not see the full effects until a day or two later, maybe longer.
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

I like lantus as it doesn't have so much of the day to day fiddle factor. With pzi its trying to work out what dose to give. Lantus you hold the same dose for 3-5 days before deciding if its going to work. Pzi feels to me (although I don't use it) that its more time intensive for newbies and may require a deeper understanding. Plus there is more lantus support on here.

I am going to PM Carl and see what his take is. He has a good understanding of both and if he thinks you stay on pzi then i would but we will need to make some tweaks.

Tweak one. Let deb set up a spreadsheet for you.

Wendy
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Thanks everyone...
Deb, would you mind making up a spreadsheet from what I have posted or do you need more info. Once it is set up, I think I can tweak the Excel doc to include the columns I would like. I'm not a techie, so we'll see! :lol:
Thanks for your help.
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Libby,

See your PM for the information I need from you in order to do the setup for you.
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

I like lantus as it doesn't have so much of the day to day fiddle factor. With pzi its trying to work out what dose to give. Lantus you hold the same dose for 3-5 days before deciding if its going to work. Pzi feels to me (although I don't use it) that its more time intensive for newbies and may require a deeper understanding. Plus there is more lantus support on here.

I am going to PM Carl and see what his take is. He has a good understanding of both and if he thinks you stay on pzi then i would but we will need to make some tweaks.


Here's my take -
All 3 are good types of insulin (Lantus, Levemir, and Prozinc). The "L's" work alike, but a little bit different. Both are depot insulins, but users of each have their reasons for preferring one over the other, and a lot of it has to do with how well each of their cats responds to them.
Prozinc is different in that it is not a depot-type insulin.

I used compounded PZI, which is not exactly like Prozinc, but works the same way. Prozinc is supposed to work a little bit longer, but in terms of how they function in a cat's system, they are alike.

Here's the best way I have ever heard the question "which insulin is best?" answered:
"The best insulin is the one that works best for YOUR cat."
There is no "best" insulin outside of that specific answer, in my humble opinion.

I agree with what other people have said, in large part...
You are more likely to find users of Lantus on the board. It's the most popular and used insulin here, has been for several years, and most experienced members on the board are using it, or have used it.
The Tight Regulation protocol used by Lantus and Levemir users offers a cat the best chance at remission. Will it get every cat into remission? No. Every cat won't go into remission. Some need insulin for the rest of their lives. That's true no matter what type of insulin you use.
There have been kitties who have not done well on Lantus, and have done well on Levemir. Others have done well switching to Prozinc. Former Prozinc users have been able to get their cats off the juice by switching to either "L" type insulin.

The dosing logic is different between Prozinc and the "L's". The primary "number" that determines dosage and dosage adjustments if you are following the Tight Regulation Protocol is the "nadir" number. The protocol clearly sets out when you increase and decrease a dose, and how much you adjust the dose, usually in .25u increments.
With Prozinc, there are a couple of different approaches you can use, but there is not a formal protocol available "here" that tells you what to shoot, or when to reduce or increase, or by how much. Other feline diabetes boards exist where people follow a "tight regulation" protocol for Prozinc, but nobody here uses or advises on those protocols.

One way to use Prozinc is to determine a good starting dose, hold that dose for a few days, test at each preshot and test around nadir, then evaluate the data to determine if the dose needs to be adjusted. Most adjustments are also in .25u increments.

Another way is to test at preshot and nadir, calculate how far the BG drops on a given dose, and then develop a "sliding scale" where you adjust the dosage based on your preshot numbers, to try to achieve a "nadir goal". That way does require a good bit of testing, and a good bit of experimentation.
Many people believe that Prozinc is dosed just on the preshots, and can be adjusted based on the preshot test numbers, but that's not really true. You have to test mid-cycle just like you do with Lantus or Levemir, because you need to know if the dosage is too high, too low, or just right. You need to know "how low is low" in order to really know what a dose is doing.

The real difficult aspect to using Prozinc is that there isn't a protocol to follow, so like Wendy said, there can be a day by day fiddle factor. The TR protocol for Lantus/Lev, make it easier, in my opinion. At least there are guidelines to follow that are based on scientific studies and proven to work. That, and there are far fewer people using Prozinc and advising on it. The experienced people who use or have used Prozinc are all great people, there just aren't as many of them that are active on the board on a daily basis.

There are, in my opinion, a couple of benefits to Prozinc that don't exist with Lantus and Levemir.

You can adjust the dosage on a daily or shot by shot basis, and expect to see results quickly, because there isn't a depot, and dose adjustments don't normally take long to "show up" in the numbers. So while you may have to "fiddle", you see pretty quickly if the fiddling "worked".

You also have more flexibility as far as shot timing goes. If it's clear, based on data, that a shot isn't quite lasting 12 hours, you can shoot earlier, even an hour or two. And if it looks like the cycles last longer than 12 hours, you can shoot late, or you can adjust the dosage up (or down) to compensate for the adjustment in shot timing. But it takes data gathering, and experimentation. And mid-cycle testing.

Bottom line?
Cats can go into remission on any insulin. It's rare when you aren't using one of the "big three", but I have seen a couple that have gone into remission on Humulin, Caninsulin or others.

Bob went off the juice after ten weeks on compounded PZI. Would he have gone OTJ on Lantus or Levemir? Possibly, but I'll never know. I used a sliding scale, where I adjusted his dose on a shot by shot basis, and his preshot numbers determined the dosage. I didn't follow a protocol. I followed my vet's advice at first, and when I felt that his dosage had gone too high at 4u, I went "rogue" on my vet and just started winging it. I started shooting lower doses, based on what I felt comfortable giving him. And it worked. For whatever reason. He was fed LC fancy feast and Friskees from day one after a lifetime of dry food. I never gave him a shot without testing first, but I didn't test nearly enough "mid-cycle". I wasn't an active member here for most of the time he was on insulin, but did post on another feline diabetes message board back then. Most of what I learned here I did so just from lurking and reading a lot. Anything I know about Lantus or Levemir I have learned from reading, from looking at spreadsheets, and from asking the wonderful experienced people who populate the TR forum a million questions. I've had a large number of "tutors" who have helped me understand how those insulins work. Not because I needed to know, just because I wanted to understand and they are gracious enough to teach me.

There isn't any way for you to know for sure if a switch to Lantus will be best or will help Libby. If you feel you have been trying Prozinc for long enough to believe that it isn't working well, then yes, I think you should give a lot of thought to switching. I can tell you that if that is what you decide to do, you most definitely will not suffer from lack of input or experienced help. It would also be helpful if you have a vet who is willing to support switching, and who understands the Tight Regulation protocol. No matter which insulin you use, I think it is very important that your vet is "on board" and understands the logic behind what you are doing.

OK, if you're eyes aren't bleeding from my usual wordiness by now, I hope all of that input helps!

Carl
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Well said, Carl! Just one of the many reasons why we all love you so much. :YMHUG:

I always tell people I'm biased because I use Lantus, but any of the three (Lantus, Levemir, ProZinc) have been proven time and time again to work well in cats so any of those three are a "good choice."

Read Carl's second-to-last paragraph again and think about whether or not you want to continue with ProZinc or give Lantus (or Levemir) a try.
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Thanks Carl for your input!
I have a better understanding now on how PZ works, so it makes a little more sense. I'm going to give it another month and see how we do. I test before each shot and again before bed. This has been working so far. I got a little wiggy when she had a hypo event last week and cut way back - basically started over with a single unit and built up from there - so far nothing over 2 units. There have been mornings when her levels are in the low 100s so I don't administer any insulin, but 12 hours later, it can be up in the 200s or even 300s.
One thing that did happen yesterday was Libby peed on the bed - in all of our 7 years together, she has never used anything but the box (which I keep meticulously clean). I'm not sure why it happened yesterday! Her urine does not smell like she has a UTI, but if she does it again, I'll have it tested. Hopefully this doesn't continue! I know UTIs are common but my vet said I would know if she had one by the smell of the urine.
Anyway, that's it for now. I'll keep posting, so that maybe other PZ users can have a friend on the message board since, like you said, there aren't a lot of us out there.
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Sounds like a good plan. Heres what I suggest though to make the most out of this month!

- Set up the spreadsheet ( see your PM from deb)
- Follow Carls suggested methodologies by testing at pre shot and around nadir. Hold each dose a few days. Make adjustments at 0.25 increments .Dont hold a dose too long if it isnt working. Plus with some experimentation you could develop a sliding dosing scale.

Lastly, and I think this is key to getting better regulation, I would keep posting but instead do it on our PZI board http://www.felinediabetes.com/FDMB/viewforum.php?f=24.

I would post on a regular basis (maybe even daily or whenever you think a dose change may be needed) and that way the experience PZI users such as Carl and Sue & Oliver(GA) etc can keep an eye on you, look at your sheet , answer your questions and help advise on dosing.

And keep us updated too!

Wendy
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

In case anyone is interested, I received a response from the Fussie Cat people on the Carb, Fat and Calorie counts for their canned cat foods:
Fat (max) for our two Chicken based formulas is 1.5%
Fat (max) for the rest of our Tuna based formulas is 1.4%
Carbs (max) for our two Chicken based formulas is 3.0%
Carbs (max) for the rest of our Tuna based formulas is 0.5%
Calories (per can) for our two Chicken based formulas is 48
Calories (per can) for the rest of our Tuna based formulas is 49
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

what do the % mean? % by weight? as fed? dry matter? % calories? You want % calories from carbs as fed but that doesnt sound like thats it?

Wendy
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Per 3 oz. can.

Wendy&Tiggy said:
what do the % mean? % by weight? as fed? dry matter? % calories? You want % calories from carbs as fed but that doesnt sound like thats it?

Wendy
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Wendy&Tiggy said:
You want % calories from carbs as fed but that doesnt sound like thats it?

With the Max/Minimum, it looks like they gave you the Guaranteed Analysis and not the As Fed.
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Not buying this brand anyway - we're feeding them BFF (Best Feline Friends) - High Protien, low carbs, low calories.
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

BFF is pretty good - its just a lot of fish though. We recommend feeding fish only twice a week for the same reason humans shouldnt eat it that much - too much iodine.

Hows Libby doing otherwise?

Wendy
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Wendy&Tiggy said:
BFF is pretty good - its just a lot of fish though. We recommend feeding fish only twice a week for the same reason humans shouldnt eat it that much - too much iodine.

Hows Libby doing otherwise?

Wendy
Maybe too much mercury?
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

So far I thought Libby was doing well... numbers were consistently in the 200s . However, this week she has become completely lethargic. She is doing all of the three Ps just as if nothing was wrong, but won't play, sleeps all day. ugh... Vet said her numbers shouldn't be causing this type of lethargy.
We went to the vet on Wednesday morning and they did a urinalysis (thought maybe a urinary infection) but that was negative. They drew blood and nothing popped up - no over abundance of white blood cells, so they didn't think it was an infection. No fever. They are running a complete blood panel again to see what's what. She lost another pound, but that may be attributed to the new food for the last month since it is lower in calories. Has anybody had this happen? I'm freaking out waiting for the test results which I am hoping will come in tonight. Any suggestions on what this could be from those out there that have been there and done that with their diabetic kitties??
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

I see you have not set up a google spreadsheet to track the BG readings. It's much easier to track here than in the profile doc you have set up. Easier to see the trends and the color coding is very helpful. How to do a SS setup and link to signature. Only takes about 3 minutes.

No recent updates with BG numbers, so I'm not sure what might be going on.
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Can't access the SS. Would you please change the share options to "anyone who has the link". That will give us read only access.

Would you describe more why you think it might be neuropathy? Could be low potassium also I think.
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Changed the setting. As for neuropathy... just reading as much as I can and that's the only thing that keeps popping up regarding weakness...nothing about low potassium has come up. Wouldn't that be only if she is peeing a lot? She's not - that part of her routine has returned to normal months ago... once she started on insulin.
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

I only remember reading about the low potassium from Carl&Bob. I thought I remember him talking about some general muscle weekness associated with the low potassium.You might want to PM him and ask him to come visit your post.

Deborah & Shasta is another member that has a cat with low potassium, I think.
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Heard from vet tonight... looks like pancreatitis. No ketones in the urine. Fructosamine is above normal but blood is ok. No liver changes. Not neuropathy - and potassium is normal. We will start on antibiotics tomorrow. Wish us luck. This may be in the early stages since she is still eating and not hiding or seemingly in any pain (that I can tell).Anybody out there ever have to deal with this? Any support would be most welcome. Thanks everybody.
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Libby is doing better after 4 days on antibiotics. She's getting back to her old self... now we are back to trying to regulate the injections. Hopefully this won't be a recurring problem. She scared the bejesus out of us. Four months of living on the edge and not knowing what to expect next has been rough for us and for kitty!
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Antibiotics can cause irritation and stomach upset when they kill off some of the good bacteria along with the bad. Providing probiotics a couple of hours after the antibiotic helps restore good bacteria in the gut. A teaspoon of plain yogurt with active cultures may help, or FortiFlora (available at our shopping partner, Amazon, link at top of page).
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

I cant get your spreadsheet link to work in your signature? it seems to be broken somehow..

Also you should try and get some mid cycle tests - its the best way to know how well a dose is working because she could be dropping too low, or not enough.. Preshot levels dont tell you that.
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

She's doing really well today. Updated the spreadsheet again.
Thanks
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Very excited... Libby's numbers are consistently in the 100's this week on only 1.5 units of insulin. Now that she has finished the antibiotics and whatever it was that was ailing her has subsided, things are settling in. Phew! This is a good thing...... thanks to all for your support. :-D
 
Re: My female 6 year old cat was just diagnosed with diabete

Great! Can you give more numbers.. I would like to see how she is doing. Are you getting tests preshot as well as mid cycle?

Wendy
 
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