Megan & Binky
Member Since 2019
Hello all!
My 12-year-old Binky was diagnosed with diabetes at the beginning of March. We are currently doing 1 unit of Lantus twice a day, and we're still figuring out the best dose for her.
We'd had a rough cat winter - we lost our 15-year-old Sully to cancer in January, and immediately afterwards, Ashe (18) started to go downhill due to digestive issues. He's still with us and needs some support, but he's doing alright.
I noticed about a month after Sully's passing that, wow, I was still scooping a lot of pee for being down one cat. Ashe is on sub-q fluids, so I thought it was him, but figured I should bring Binky in just in case...
And so, here we are. I was upset when I got the initial diagnosis because Binky is not a people cat. She is (or at least was) a cat's cat. I took her in as a stray for Ashe back in 2007 because we had lost his brother in December of 2006. So, she's my cat's cat. And hasn't been overly friendly with people, just content to do her own thing and get affection from Ashe. For years she was known as "Couch Cat" because she had made a hole in the couch, and she'd hang out there quite often.
I was worried that all the human contact would stress her out so much that I wouldn't be able to control her diabetes, and we'd just manage as best as we could, but it would be short.
Turns out that's not the case. She's not nuts about being poked, but she does it for the treats. And since treating her, she's become much more outgoing an affectionate, to the point where it's a little inconvenient. Like waking me up at 3 am for head and chin scritches kind of inconvenient.
We did our second curve today, and she did super well. I didn't have to extract her from the couch or pluck her out of the cat tree or anything. Shake the bag of treats, and over she came.
Other health issues that Binky has: feline herpes, urinary crystals and stones (she's on Royal Canin SO wet food), and she has a heart murmur. And she needs a dental cleaning, but the vet wants to get the diabetes under control before we do that.
Thanks for reading all that! I look forward to learning from all of you and becoming an expert in feline diabetes!
My 12-year-old Binky was diagnosed with diabetes at the beginning of March. We are currently doing 1 unit of Lantus twice a day, and we're still figuring out the best dose for her.
We'd had a rough cat winter - we lost our 15-year-old Sully to cancer in January, and immediately afterwards, Ashe (18) started to go downhill due to digestive issues. He's still with us and needs some support, but he's doing alright.
I noticed about a month after Sully's passing that, wow, I was still scooping a lot of pee for being down one cat. Ashe is on sub-q fluids, so I thought it was him, but figured I should bring Binky in just in case...
And so, here we are. I was upset when I got the initial diagnosis because Binky is not a people cat. She is (or at least was) a cat's cat. I took her in as a stray for Ashe back in 2007 because we had lost his brother in December of 2006. So, she's my cat's cat. And hasn't been overly friendly with people, just content to do her own thing and get affection from Ashe. For years she was known as "Couch Cat" because she had made a hole in the couch, and she'd hang out there quite often.
I was worried that all the human contact would stress her out so much that I wouldn't be able to control her diabetes, and we'd just manage as best as we could, but it would be short.
Turns out that's not the case. She's not nuts about being poked, but she does it for the treats. And since treating her, she's become much more outgoing an affectionate, to the point where it's a little inconvenient. Like waking me up at 3 am for head and chin scritches kind of inconvenient.
We did our second curve today, and she did super well. I didn't have to extract her from the couch or pluck her out of the cat tree or anything. Shake the bag of treats, and over she came.
Other health issues that Binky has: feline herpes, urinary crystals and stones (she's on Royal Canin SO wet food), and she has a heart murmur. And she needs a dental cleaning, but the vet wants to get the diabetes under control before we do that.
Thanks for reading all that! I look forward to learning from all of you and becoming an expert in feline diabetes!