Marvin's Mama
Member Since 2014
Hi,
My 13 year old cat Marvin was diagnosed with Diabetes in November. I have started home testing his blood levels (we're not very good at this yet, and I've only done a few readings).
-At the end of December we were at 3 units twice a day. Home tests of his glucose were 38 (at 4.5 hours after an insulin injection), and the following day another reading of 135 at the same time as an injection. Though Marvin wasn't acting strange, the numbers scared me and I dropped him down to 2-2.5 units. On the lower dosage, his thirst was a lot bigger than it had been, and I brought him back up to 3 units, and recently had a visit to the vet.
-At 6 hours after an insulin injection, the vet's readings were 57 (my glucometer gave a reading of 42 and 49 while were were there).
-Following the visit, we dropped Marvin down to 2 units. During the week his readings were 95 (5 hours post injection), and 175 (time of injection). The vet was very happy with these numbers, and told us to drop down to 1 unit. (I thought the numbers were high...)
-Marvin's been at 1 unit, twice a day, for 2 and a half days now. His glucose level this afternoon was 59 (6 hours post injection). I am very surprised by this number - his thirst is really high!
Even though this last reading was low, I am still concerned about him being on too low a dose of insulin. I thought he should stay at 2 units longer, I felt like his blood readings were high at 2 units.
I'm also concerned with my glucometer and readings being off. Sometimes the strip sits out for 10 minutes before a reading - Marvin gets up right before I'm about to poke him, and I need to re-comfort and calm him. It's the sound of the strips jiggling in the container that scares him, so I need to get them out well in advance! At the vet, I let a strip sit for just a few minutes and also used a fresh strip to see if there was much difference. There was a slight difference, but it was only out for 3 or 4 minutes.
For the last reading, I had a strip out and ready in the meter, got blood, touched the strip to the drop, and then realized that the strip must have been in the meter too long and was no longer accepted. With the blood drop still on his ear, I put a new strip in the meter and used the same blood drop. Should I have wiped the drop away and massaged his ear for a fresher drop? The existing drop was sitting there for maybe 30 seconds max, but had been touched by the non-working strip. Is this going to affect the reading?
Any thoughts regarding the insulin dosage would be great! Thank you!
My 13 year old cat Marvin was diagnosed with Diabetes in November. I have started home testing his blood levels (we're not very good at this yet, and I've only done a few readings).
-At the end of December we were at 3 units twice a day. Home tests of his glucose were 38 (at 4.5 hours after an insulin injection), and the following day another reading of 135 at the same time as an injection. Though Marvin wasn't acting strange, the numbers scared me and I dropped him down to 2-2.5 units. On the lower dosage, his thirst was a lot bigger than it had been, and I brought him back up to 3 units, and recently had a visit to the vet.
-At 6 hours after an insulin injection, the vet's readings were 57 (my glucometer gave a reading of 42 and 49 while were were there).
-Following the visit, we dropped Marvin down to 2 units. During the week his readings were 95 (5 hours post injection), and 175 (time of injection). The vet was very happy with these numbers, and told us to drop down to 1 unit. (I thought the numbers were high...)
-Marvin's been at 1 unit, twice a day, for 2 and a half days now. His glucose level this afternoon was 59 (6 hours post injection). I am very surprised by this number - his thirst is really high!
Even though this last reading was low, I am still concerned about him being on too low a dose of insulin. I thought he should stay at 2 units longer, I felt like his blood readings were high at 2 units.
I'm also concerned with my glucometer and readings being off. Sometimes the strip sits out for 10 minutes before a reading - Marvin gets up right before I'm about to poke him, and I need to re-comfort and calm him. It's the sound of the strips jiggling in the container that scares him, so I need to get them out well in advance! At the vet, I let a strip sit for just a few minutes and also used a fresh strip to see if there was much difference. There was a slight difference, but it was only out for 3 or 4 minutes.
For the last reading, I had a strip out and ready in the meter, got blood, touched the strip to the drop, and then realized that the strip must have been in the meter too long and was no longer accepted. With the blood drop still on his ear, I put a new strip in the meter and used the same blood drop. Should I have wiped the drop away and massaged his ear for a fresher drop? The existing drop was sitting there for maybe 30 seconds max, but had been touched by the non-working strip. Is this going to affect the reading?
Any thoughts regarding the insulin dosage would be great! Thank you!