granadilla
Member Since 2015
Yup, hold off until 6 p.m. Then test, feed, shoot. That's the sequence. You want to test first in case he has a low number that isn't safe to shoot.
Tested him again near 11am and he was at 90. I think that's closer to where I would want him to be at his low at 12pm. I think I am on track now so long as he doesn't get too high before feeding tonight.
CJ was on Novolin N and the day I learned to home test, she went hypo. Then she went into remission so I am not familiar with how to adjust doses. I can say that Novolin did not last longer than 6-8 hours in CJ. If you want optimum benefits from this insulin, you'd need to give it every 8 hours. But few caregivers can do that.
From looking at your latest numbers in your post above, though, the #'s are looking good at the lower dose. Ozzy doesn't appear to bouncing from one extreme to another.
See this primer for feeding. Feeding should be an hour before shooting per primer, not 2 hours before. http://www.felinediabetes.com/FDMB/threads/humulin-n-primer.303/
Note: Humulin and Novolin are the same. They are just made by different manufacturers.
What are you feeding Ozzy?
It will help us help you if you can put the date Ozzy was diagnosed, insulin using, dose, food you are feeding, and any other medical conditions, if applicable, in your signature line (go to your Profile and click on signature). That way others here can help you more quickly.
Cost-wise, you want to look at which insulin is going to work best for your cat. You can get Lantus, a longer-lasting, more gentle insulin at a great price from Mark's Pharmacy. Your vet just has to fax in an RX. https://rxcanada4less.com/search.php (type in Lantus in the Enter Product Name Here box. Many members here order from Mark's Pharmacy. You can also check the For Sale section in this forum; there are often members selling insulins. Other options are seeing if a phamarcy, nursing home or hospital will sell you a single pen.
The one good thing about Novolin is that it exits the body quickly so if you switch to a longer lasting depot insulin like Lantus, there's no need to wait a few days. You also don't have to wait if you decide to switch to ProZinc.
There is no need to use more than one meter. Most of us use a human meter (ReliOn Micro or Confirm). Stick to one meter. It will be confusing to us if you go back and forth between meters.
Again, here's BJM glucometer chart. You can show it to your vet if necessary. It is an excellent guide to help you in a hypo crisis and tell you when to shoot insulin or not:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1oI_34_EgqeKdpyttFW0oLoG1mbw16IkATAWHhoQD2JU/pub
And here's a link to creating a spreadsheet. This will help us help you faster.
http://www.felinediabetes.com/FDMB/...te-a-ss-and-link-it-in-your-signature.130337/
@Ozzy
Also look at the link CatMa provided for Lantus. You'll need U100 syringes for Lantus, and I think you can buy them cheaply at Walmart. (Sorry, I don't know which syringes you use for Novolin so you probably already have some syringes.)
For what it's worth Mark's pharmacy isn't accepting new patients. I've used 77canadapharmacy.net with good success, little bit more $ than Mark's but $200 cheaper than US pharmacy.