Mindy & Max
Active Member
Hello,
My apologies, this is going to be long...
My cat Max (8yo last October) was diagnosed Friday with diabetes. It's possible something else is wrong, but without treating the diabetes first, the vet can't run any other tests reliably. He's always been a "pukey" cat--he'll throw up fairly easily if he overeats, but last fall the vomiting gradually increased. He saw the vet in October, she recommended changing his food to Science Diet Light/Hairball (both cats had been on it before, but I'd switched due to cost). I did switch it back, and it didn't help. I switched both cats back to Iams Indoor/Hairball Light, and that at least brought the vomiting down to just water, or mostly water--no solid or undigested food. In December the vomiting became downright unbearable--throwing up at least once a week, but closer to twice a week. I finally got him in to the vet at New Year's, and she thought it might be IBD, so we tried some low-allergen Rx food for two weeks. That improved it, but didn't eliminate it. At New Year's, he'd lost about 1.5lbs since his visit in October. For a 16lb cat, that was only slightly concerning, and we figured most likely due to all the vomiting.
After the Rx food didn't change things, we switched back to the Iams, and put him on prednisone for a month (2 weeks daily, 2 weeks every other day). During that time, he lost more weight, but the vomiting nearly stopped. He only threw up twice during that time. I made an appointment to have his weight checked tho because he was definitely skinny and feeling bony. I'd been through tryign to nurse a cat back (unsuccessfully) from liver failure, and knew was major weight loss felt like. So...on Friday he was 4.5lbs lighter than at New Year's. Definitely a bad sign, and the vet ran a variety of tests and came up with diabetes (BG was 500-something).
So here's my dilemma: 1) I'm a bit scarred by the experience of feeding a cat with a syringe and giving him pills every day for 2 months only to lose him in the end anyhow to liver failure. 2) I have a 2.5 year old daughter and a 5 month old son. I work 8-5, and have a 40-minute commute each way. I love my cat, I've had him longer than I've had my husband, but I barely have enough time to take care of my kids. I'm really not sure if I can handle the daily drill of caring for a diabetic cat, let alone the costs. Really, our son came a year earlier than planned--finances with two in daycare are TIGHT. And I also have another cat and a dog. Both of them seem relatively healthy, but given my current track record with cats (liver failure, diabetes), I'm not so sure. ;-)
Anyone have experience with a diabetic cat under these sort of home circumstances? And we do travel--half my family lives in CA, and I'm in MI. I don't really believe we have anyone we can rely on to care for him when we're gone...and don't even know if there is a place we can board him while we're gone. He's a bit of a high-stress animal as it is, particularly if he's not with ME. We live in a very small town, access to a lot of things is somewhat limited. Anyone have any advice? I feel awful for considering to put him down, but I'm having a hard time seeing another choice. I don't know yet what the costs are going to be--the vet is going to get back to me early this week (appt on Friday was just before closing, she stayed late to run the tests and called after hours to give me the news) with treatment options.
My apologies, this is going to be long...
My cat Max (8yo last October) was diagnosed Friday with diabetes. It's possible something else is wrong, but without treating the diabetes first, the vet can't run any other tests reliably. He's always been a "pukey" cat--he'll throw up fairly easily if he overeats, but last fall the vomiting gradually increased. He saw the vet in October, she recommended changing his food to Science Diet Light/Hairball (both cats had been on it before, but I'd switched due to cost). I did switch it back, and it didn't help. I switched both cats back to Iams Indoor/Hairball Light, and that at least brought the vomiting down to just water, or mostly water--no solid or undigested food. In December the vomiting became downright unbearable--throwing up at least once a week, but closer to twice a week. I finally got him in to the vet at New Year's, and she thought it might be IBD, so we tried some low-allergen Rx food for two weeks. That improved it, but didn't eliminate it. At New Year's, he'd lost about 1.5lbs since his visit in October. For a 16lb cat, that was only slightly concerning, and we figured most likely due to all the vomiting.
After the Rx food didn't change things, we switched back to the Iams, and put him on prednisone for a month (2 weeks daily, 2 weeks every other day). During that time, he lost more weight, but the vomiting nearly stopped. He only threw up twice during that time. I made an appointment to have his weight checked tho because he was definitely skinny and feeling bony. I'd been through tryign to nurse a cat back (unsuccessfully) from liver failure, and knew was major weight loss felt like. So...on Friday he was 4.5lbs lighter than at New Year's. Definitely a bad sign, and the vet ran a variety of tests and came up with diabetes (BG was 500-something).
So here's my dilemma: 1) I'm a bit scarred by the experience of feeding a cat with a syringe and giving him pills every day for 2 months only to lose him in the end anyhow to liver failure. 2) I have a 2.5 year old daughter and a 5 month old son. I work 8-5, and have a 40-minute commute each way. I love my cat, I've had him longer than I've had my husband, but I barely have enough time to take care of my kids. I'm really not sure if I can handle the daily drill of caring for a diabetic cat, let alone the costs. Really, our son came a year earlier than planned--finances with two in daycare are TIGHT. And I also have another cat and a dog. Both of them seem relatively healthy, but given my current track record with cats (liver failure, diabetes), I'm not so sure. ;-)
Anyone have experience with a diabetic cat under these sort of home circumstances? And we do travel--half my family lives in CA, and I'm in MI. I don't really believe we have anyone we can rely on to care for him when we're gone...and don't even know if there is a place we can board him while we're gone. He's a bit of a high-stress animal as it is, particularly if he's not with ME. We live in a very small town, access to a lot of things is somewhat limited. Anyone have any advice? I feel awful for considering to put him down, but I'm having a hard time seeing another choice. I don't know yet what the costs are going to be--the vet is going to get back to me early this week (appt on Friday was just before closing, she stayed late to run the tests and called after hours to give me the news) with treatment options.