Hello Everyone,
I've been doing a lot of research and reading, and most of the good information I've found has come from users on this website and forum. So a big thanks already for teaching me so much. It has been a long day / series of days with regards to him being diagnosed, asking tons of questions to my vet, and just getting his supplies. I apologize in advance if I'm all over the place. I'm kind of overwhelmed at the moment with scheduling his insulin, type of insulin, how many times to feed him, food, etc.
April, my 11 year old orange and white tabby, has just been diagnosed. It seems early on because it's only been a few weeks where I was kind of seeing more and more clumps in the litter box. He is a big boy, clocking in at 20 pounds (he is longer than most cats in his defense). His sugar came in at 22mmol/L or 396 mg/dL. Even when the vet saw him for the first time as a kitten, he had told me that April would be a big boy. He has been on Performatrin weight management since 1 years old. Now I realize what a horrible food that is, and I feel like a horrible owner to have been the one to put him in this situation. I feel even more horrible that I bought the Hill's w/d garbage. I can't get him to eat wet food nor can I find EVO or Young Again here.
I realize I must switch to wet food. However he is a big refuser of that. I will get him onto it eventually. I am in the process of ordering Young Again Zero Carb because of success stories such as this (viewtopic.php?f=28&t=90113&p=1003577#p1003541). Unfortunately, being in Canada, I have to add 25$ per 8lb bag to get it up here, but it's well worth it if he's eating less, feeling more full, and having much less carbs.
This is how I am currently feeding him. This is all going to change when my Young Again comes in, as that is a much more calorie dense food.
6am - 1/4 cup food
2pm - 1/8 cup food
6pm - 1/4 cup food
2am - 1/8 cup food
This is roughly about 210 calories per day.
I've spent 500+$ in vet bills and supplies already, but I am getting the feeling my vet is either not well versed or just not taking what I'm thinking seriously enough, so I turn to you guys. I am looking to get another vet however. I don't feel that the office I go to has my cat's best interests at heart. My vet currently doesn't even really subscribe to the possible remission theory with proper food and insulin management.
I am to give April 3 units of Caninsulin bid. This makes me feel even more horrible as I read threads on here now. I hear people are having great success with Lantus. I've also been reading around, and even from the manufacturer, that it's not recommended that he start that high, so I am going to start with 2 units bid. I will be home monitoring as well. I cannot afford to have him go to the vet many more times soon just to have his sugar checked at 30 bucks a pop just for the check. Not that I'm being negligent, but I think I can monitor his sugar as I am a paramedic, and the process is not much different than that in humans.
My question after all that is, should I give Caninsulin the try, and switch to Lantus later depending on how well April responds? How is Caninsulin after all that FDA advisory and such? I can't seem to find anything that shows that they improved Caninsulin or anything of the sort. I had a tab open that I must have closed regarding Lantus, and how the onset, and duration were different. I realize this changes depending on the cat, but should I expect better regulation throughout the day with Lantus than Caninsulin?
Sorry I am just going on and on now. Just overwhelmed as it seems everything I've done from buying new food to insulin has been the wrong decision. Throw in glucose curves and Caninsulin throwing in a huge bg drop 2-4 hours after injection, and not lasting the entire 12 is making my head spin.
Thanks for any help you guys can provide.
-april
PS. I will be monitoring with a One Touch Ultra 2. Wondering if anyone has had experience with the True Control TrueResult (http://www.amazon.com/TRUEResult-Blood- ... hpc_text_y). Test strips are about half as much with that glucometer.
I've been doing a lot of research and reading, and most of the good information I've found has come from users on this website and forum. So a big thanks already for teaching me so much. It has been a long day / series of days with regards to him being diagnosed, asking tons of questions to my vet, and just getting his supplies. I apologize in advance if I'm all over the place. I'm kind of overwhelmed at the moment with scheduling his insulin, type of insulin, how many times to feed him, food, etc.
April, my 11 year old orange and white tabby, has just been diagnosed. It seems early on because it's only been a few weeks where I was kind of seeing more and more clumps in the litter box. He is a big boy, clocking in at 20 pounds (he is longer than most cats in his defense). His sugar came in at 22mmol/L or 396 mg/dL. Even when the vet saw him for the first time as a kitten, he had told me that April would be a big boy. He has been on Performatrin weight management since 1 years old. Now I realize what a horrible food that is, and I feel like a horrible owner to have been the one to put him in this situation. I feel even more horrible that I bought the Hill's w/d garbage. I can't get him to eat wet food nor can I find EVO or Young Again here.
I realize I must switch to wet food. However he is a big refuser of that. I will get him onto it eventually. I am in the process of ordering Young Again Zero Carb because of success stories such as this (viewtopic.php?f=28&t=90113&p=1003577#p1003541). Unfortunately, being in Canada, I have to add 25$ per 8lb bag to get it up here, but it's well worth it if he's eating less, feeling more full, and having much less carbs.
This is how I am currently feeding him. This is all going to change when my Young Again comes in, as that is a much more calorie dense food.
6am - 1/4 cup food
2pm - 1/8 cup food
6pm - 1/4 cup food
2am - 1/8 cup food
This is roughly about 210 calories per day.
I've spent 500+$ in vet bills and supplies already, but I am getting the feeling my vet is either not well versed or just not taking what I'm thinking seriously enough, so I turn to you guys. I am looking to get another vet however. I don't feel that the office I go to has my cat's best interests at heart. My vet currently doesn't even really subscribe to the possible remission theory with proper food and insulin management.
I am to give April 3 units of Caninsulin bid. This makes me feel even more horrible as I read threads on here now. I hear people are having great success with Lantus. I've also been reading around, and even from the manufacturer, that it's not recommended that he start that high, so I am going to start with 2 units bid. I will be home monitoring as well. I cannot afford to have him go to the vet many more times soon just to have his sugar checked at 30 bucks a pop just for the check. Not that I'm being negligent, but I think I can monitor his sugar as I am a paramedic, and the process is not much different than that in humans.
My question after all that is, should I give Caninsulin the try, and switch to Lantus later depending on how well April responds? How is Caninsulin after all that FDA advisory and such? I can't seem to find anything that shows that they improved Caninsulin or anything of the sort. I had a tab open that I must have closed regarding Lantus, and how the onset, and duration were different. I realize this changes depending on the cat, but should I expect better regulation throughout the day with Lantus than Caninsulin?
Sorry I am just going on and on now. Just overwhelmed as it seems everything I've done from buying new food to insulin has been the wrong decision. Throw in glucose curves and Caninsulin throwing in a huge bg drop 2-4 hours after injection, and not lasting the entire 12 is making my head spin.
Thanks for any help you guys can provide.
-april
PS. I will be monitoring with a One Touch Ultra 2. Wondering if anyone has had experience with the True Control TrueResult (http://www.amazon.com/TRUEResult-Blood- ... hpc_text_y). Test strips are about half as much with that glucometer.