Erica & Carter
Member Since 2016
Hey everyone,
New to the forum. Just have a few questions.
I have a 10 year old male, neutered boy that was recently diagnosed as diabetic a little less than a month ago. About 2 weeks ago he had a glucose curve done at my veterinarian, and he is on 3 units of Vetsulin twice daily.
I just bought the AlphaTrak 2 to do at home blood glucose tests, and did a fasted BG on him this morning. He had been fasted since 9pm the last night and the last time he had his insulin was 6pm last night.
It read at 551, which is very high, however since it was the first time having his ear pricked at home, and I was getting used to using this specific lancet (usually I have free-handed before, which might be what I have to end up doing) I know stress/excitement could have raised his blood sugar. He was figgiting quite a bit so even with two people lightly restraining him it had proved to really stress him out. I know with cats sometimes it can cause a reading to be even ~200 points off.
I know when he had his curve it stayed between 300-450 in the hospital, which is where he was also apparently quite stressed.
I have some veterinary experience but not a huge amount regarding Feline Diabetes, so my question is more towards my cat's behaviour. He is an easily stressed/excitable cat in general, and I'm wondering if anyone has any tips or similar behaviours with their cats that would prevent them from getting an accurate BG reading every time? I know we're going to have to adjust his units, from my experience he will probably end up being brought up to at least 4 units twice a day, but I'm waiting on my veterinarian to call me back this morning, to see if she wants to me to test after he had in insulin/breakfast or wait and do another fasted BG tomorrow. I just want to be able to give her the most accurate readings since he is still in the beginning stages of his diabetes and I know we have some regulating to do.
He is acting like his normal self, ate all of his food, drank water, peed, and is now half asleep/purring up a storm.
New to the forum. Just have a few questions.
I have a 10 year old male, neutered boy that was recently diagnosed as diabetic a little less than a month ago. About 2 weeks ago he had a glucose curve done at my veterinarian, and he is on 3 units of Vetsulin twice daily.
I just bought the AlphaTrak 2 to do at home blood glucose tests, and did a fasted BG on him this morning. He had been fasted since 9pm the last night and the last time he had his insulin was 6pm last night.
It read at 551, which is very high, however since it was the first time having his ear pricked at home, and I was getting used to using this specific lancet (usually I have free-handed before, which might be what I have to end up doing) I know stress/excitement could have raised his blood sugar. He was figgiting quite a bit so even with two people lightly restraining him it had proved to really stress him out. I know with cats sometimes it can cause a reading to be even ~200 points off.
I know when he had his curve it stayed between 300-450 in the hospital, which is where he was also apparently quite stressed.
I have some veterinary experience but not a huge amount regarding Feline Diabetes, so my question is more towards my cat's behaviour. He is an easily stressed/excitable cat in general, and I'm wondering if anyone has any tips or similar behaviours with their cats that would prevent them from getting an accurate BG reading every time? I know we're going to have to adjust his units, from my experience he will probably end up being brought up to at least 4 units twice a day, but I'm waiting on my veterinarian to call me back this morning, to see if she wants to me to test after he had in insulin/breakfast or wait and do another fasted BG tomorrow. I just want to be able to give her the most accurate readings since he is still in the beginning stages of his diabetes and I know we have some regulating to do.
He is acting like his normal self, ate all of his food, drank water, peed, and is now half asleep/purring up a storm.
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