Leslie and Jasper
Member Since 2012
Hello everyone,
We have been fans for a while, we are newbies who have been reading the info on the site on this site and lurking on this board since Jasper our 11 year old boy was diagnosed in early May 2012. Like others we were stunned, worried and sad for our baby and generally about to be overwhelmed. Luckily we found this board early on, all the info you have shared has been such a tremendous help to us and gave us confidence to handle this. Time to surface and say THANK YOU!
Our first vet bg was 355, lab result from the same sample was 514, and that vet had us to start him right away on Purine DM and on Humulin N twice a day. A week later we took him in to our regular vet for a follow up test and requested our vet to get lab result as well as their office meter. He was skeptical, he thought his office meter reads higher than lab, but based on the previous result we pushed and the data again showed the lab is higher. The vet was dubious we could do home testing, but the difference in their test method results plus vet visit stress did not inspire confidence. After studying all the great home testing info here, we got a Relion Confirm meter at Walmart and practiced on ourselves to get a feel for the lancet, how much blood, etc - as expected, we are not diabetic. Then we got going on testing Jasper, he tolerated the first stick well so we did a 12 hour curve the next day, testing every hour. Not the most enjoyable day, but we got a clear curve. A couple days later I took Jasper to the vet about 5 hrs after morning insulin to calibrate our meter with the lab and their office meter, our meter reads slightly lower than their office meter and noticably lower than the lab. Our curve convinced our vet about home testing and we told him about this site, hopefully he will direct other patients here. Our vet is now supportive of using our home data to adjust Jasper's insulin dose.
Next was food. Jasper and our other 3 cats had been eating only dry food forever, and all strongly prefer to eat the same food, and graze all day not eat on a schedule. Pixie is allergic to chicken so that presents an extra challenge. Years ago our vet was really into animal dentistry and pushed dry food. Based on the articles here we decided to transition Jasper and our other 3 cats to wet food. Our vet has come around, and agrees wet food today is OK for all our cats. So last week ago we weaned them off dry food to just Fancy Feast pates with no chicken and no wheat gluten. Jasper and 2 other have vomited some, but seem to be acclimating to it. They dont to eat as much as we expected but at this point we are all still getting used to the can routine. We test Jasper before each shot and adjust, his 12 hrs post insulin varies 115- 360 and his 5 hrs post insulin se are low 50 -100. We are still hoping but not really sure how to get him regulated and ultimately OTJ. We are still learning how to partner with our vet on this journey and maybe consider trying different insulin instead of Humulin. We still have lots to learn, but thanks to this site we are more confident we can figure this out.
Thanks again for all the great info and encouragement, especially for us novices! Its great to know we are not alone, and there is lots of help and support for whatever challenges come up.
Leslie, Andy and Jasper
We have been fans for a while, we are newbies who have been reading the info on the site on this site and lurking on this board since Jasper our 11 year old boy was diagnosed in early May 2012. Like others we were stunned, worried and sad for our baby and generally about to be overwhelmed. Luckily we found this board early on, all the info you have shared has been such a tremendous help to us and gave us confidence to handle this. Time to surface and say THANK YOU!
Our first vet bg was 355, lab result from the same sample was 514, and that vet had us to start him right away on Purine DM and on Humulin N twice a day. A week later we took him in to our regular vet for a follow up test and requested our vet to get lab result as well as their office meter. He was skeptical, he thought his office meter reads higher than lab, but based on the previous result we pushed and the data again showed the lab is higher. The vet was dubious we could do home testing, but the difference in their test method results plus vet visit stress did not inspire confidence. After studying all the great home testing info here, we got a Relion Confirm meter at Walmart and practiced on ourselves to get a feel for the lancet, how much blood, etc - as expected, we are not diabetic. Then we got going on testing Jasper, he tolerated the first stick well so we did a 12 hour curve the next day, testing every hour. Not the most enjoyable day, but we got a clear curve. A couple days later I took Jasper to the vet about 5 hrs after morning insulin to calibrate our meter with the lab and their office meter, our meter reads slightly lower than their office meter and noticably lower than the lab. Our curve convinced our vet about home testing and we told him about this site, hopefully he will direct other patients here. Our vet is now supportive of using our home data to adjust Jasper's insulin dose.
Next was food. Jasper and our other 3 cats had been eating only dry food forever, and all strongly prefer to eat the same food, and graze all day not eat on a schedule. Pixie is allergic to chicken so that presents an extra challenge. Years ago our vet was really into animal dentistry and pushed dry food. Based on the articles here we decided to transition Jasper and our other 3 cats to wet food. Our vet has come around, and agrees wet food today is OK for all our cats. So last week ago we weaned them off dry food to just Fancy Feast pates with no chicken and no wheat gluten. Jasper and 2 other have vomited some, but seem to be acclimating to it. They dont to eat as much as we expected but at this point we are all still getting used to the can routine. We test Jasper before each shot and adjust, his 12 hrs post insulin varies 115- 360 and his 5 hrs post insulin se are low 50 -100. We are still hoping but not really sure how to get him regulated and ultimately OTJ. We are still learning how to partner with our vet on this journey and maybe consider trying different insulin instead of Humulin. We still have lots to learn, but thanks to this site we are more confident we can figure this out.
Thanks again for all the great info and encouragement, especially for us novices! Its great to know we are not alone, and there is lots of help and support for whatever challenges come up.
Leslie, Andy and Jasper