gorillahowl
Member Since 2013
Yesterday my 11-year-old cat, Wendell, was diagnosed with diabetes. I rushed him to the vet with a urinary tract infection (that is now under control) and the vet thought his extracted pee looked dilute. Blood work confirmed that my cat had a blood sugar level over 500 and Wendell was a newly minted feline diabetic.
Since it was a Saturday, and they're closed Sundays, the vet's main concern was getting Wendell through the weekend with as little change as possible. For now, I'm giving him 2 units of Lantus 2x a day and only letting him eat at two designated mealtimes. (He is usually a grazer.) Today he is resting comfortably. He took the insulin shots like a champ, and he's using the litter box. We are supposed to go back tomorrow for a blood sugar test.
I live in an urban area without a car. Round trip cab to the vet is about $40. So obviously, I want to keep vet visits to a minimum. How often can I assume to be schlepping to the vet if I test his sugar at home?
How soon should I start testing his bg at home and how often should I expect to do it? I have to go back to work Tuesday, and she seems to think that 2 units is a low enough dose (and his sugar is sufficiently high) that there shouldn't be any danger this week of him getting too much.
Since I'm not testing at home yet, and since he's used to having food to graze on during the day, should I leave a little for him?
The vet wants to put him on prescription diabetic dry food. I have not read a single good thing about dry diabetic food. Does anyone here use it?
The other concern I have with a wet diet is that Wendell does not like wet food. If there is no dry food option, how can I safely transition him to wet?
Wendell has also had problems with constipation. He is currently on a high-fiber dry food (Purina Healthy Weight) that allows him to poop easily. If I switch him to high protein, low-carb, how can I ensure he is getting enough fiber?
Finally, and this is a selfish question: Is my night life over? I work in Manhattan and live in Jersey. I rent here for the price and relative ease of commute. I have a catsitter but he is about half an hour away. My friends are in NYC. Rarely, I have to work late. If I have to be home every night to give a cat insulin at 7:30, I will be. Will missing a dose every once in a blue moon hurt/kill him? Don't get me wrong: I love my cat and I'm committed to his getting well. If it means weeknights at home and weekend days
with friends (the opposite of what I do now) so be it. I'm just wondering if this is my life for the remainder of his.
Sorry this is so long; I just want to do what's best for my baby boy. Thanks for any advice you can offer.
Since it was a Saturday, and they're closed Sundays, the vet's main concern was getting Wendell through the weekend with as little change as possible. For now, I'm giving him 2 units of Lantus 2x a day and only letting him eat at two designated mealtimes. (He is usually a grazer.) Today he is resting comfortably. He took the insulin shots like a champ, and he's using the litter box. We are supposed to go back tomorrow for a blood sugar test.
I live in an urban area without a car. Round trip cab to the vet is about $40. So obviously, I want to keep vet visits to a minimum. How often can I assume to be schlepping to the vet if I test his sugar at home?
How soon should I start testing his bg at home and how often should I expect to do it? I have to go back to work Tuesday, and she seems to think that 2 units is a low enough dose (and his sugar is sufficiently high) that there shouldn't be any danger this week of him getting too much.
Since I'm not testing at home yet, and since he's used to having food to graze on during the day, should I leave a little for him?
The vet wants to put him on prescription diabetic dry food. I have not read a single good thing about dry diabetic food. Does anyone here use it?
The other concern I have with a wet diet is that Wendell does not like wet food. If there is no dry food option, how can I safely transition him to wet?
Wendell has also had problems with constipation. He is currently on a high-fiber dry food (Purina Healthy Weight) that allows him to poop easily. If I switch him to high protein, low-carb, how can I ensure he is getting enough fiber?
Finally, and this is a selfish question: Is my night life over? I work in Manhattan and live in Jersey. I rent here for the price and relative ease of commute. I have a catsitter but he is about half an hour away. My friends are in NYC. Rarely, I have to work late. If I have to be home every night to give a cat insulin at 7:30, I will be. Will missing a dose every once in a blue moon hurt/kill him? Don't get me wrong: I love my cat and I'm committed to his getting well. If it means weeknights at home and weekend days
with friends (the opposite of what I do now) so be it. I'm just wondering if this is my life for the remainder of his.
Sorry this is so long; I just want to do what's best for my baby boy. Thanks for any advice you can offer.