? New Member - Elderly Kitty Help

Status
Not open for further replies.

Madams75

Member Since 2024
Hi, I have an 18 year old cat who has Kidney Disease and diabetes. You would never know either of this, she runs around, eats well, up and down stairs etc. We started her on Glargine this past July after she quickly started to deteriorate and was diagnosed with diabetes. At the time she got 1 unit every 12 hours. For diet she is on Kidney Care diet, wet, twice a day. About 2 months ago the vet felt she was in remission so we stopped all insulin, 3 weeks later she was lethargic and losing weight so she was re-checked and her insulin was over 600. She started us back on with 2 units this time. Since then we have been unable to stabilize her, and she has had a constant monitor (libre) on.

The issue we have is that about 5 hours or so after injection her blood sugar drops to around 50, then after dinner she starts to crawl back up, sometimes hitting above 300. We reduced her down to 1 unit every 12 hours on our own, and past few days she is steady between 300-80, with one or two dips to 50. After one of the dips she had really bad diarrhea but bounced back up with a snack.

My vet says to not give insulin if she is 120 or under. Often when we feed her she is around 150, so we do the dose only to have her drop again 5 hours later. When she gets below 70 we have been giving a few treats. We are struggling with the close monitoring, having to do midday feedings, only giving a shot if she is above a certain range - it is difficult on us to manage and she has had a continual GCM on which she hates. We know she needs insulin to some degree, but stuggling to find the right dose, etc. to keep her stable but not too low. The vet seems to not know what to do, wondering if others here have had trouble with an insulin sensitive cat and any suggestions on things I can do differently? For the most part she is happy and healthy, eats well and still plays and gets up and down stairs no problem, but we are now in constant fear watching her.
 
Hello and welcome. If the insulin dose is taking her down to 50, it's too high a dose. In fact, if she goes below 90 at all then you need to reduce the dose. Especially since she's on a kidney diet, which is generally higher carb.

Are you using the pen and pen needles to inject the insulin, or syringes? There are half unit marked syringes that allow you to give smaller doses. If you are giving a smaller dose, then you can keep giving the same consistent dose and keep her in better numbers.

We have dosing methods for people who are using glargine/Lantus. Since you are gathering blood sugar data with the Libre, we should be able to help you. Information that we need is included in this post:
New? How You Can Help Us Help You!
 
Hello and welcome. If the insulin dose is taking her down to 50, it's too high a dose. In fact, if she goes below 90 at all then you need to reduce the dose. Especially since she's on a kidney diet, which is generally higher carb.

Are you using the pen and pen needles to inject the insulin, or syringes? There are half unit marked syringes that allow you to give smaller doses. If you are giving a smaller dose, then you can keep giving the same consistent dose and keep her in better numbers.

We have dosing methods for people who are using glargine/Lantus. Since you are gathering blood sugar data with the Libre, we should be able to help you. Information that we need is included in this post:
New? How You Can Help Us Help You!
We are using the syringes. She has a Libre on that is due to expire in a couple of days, and we go every two weeks to have a new one put on. Would love to get her off of that all the time. I will try reducing dose to half a unit tonight, assuming she is above 150? She was at 50 just 2 hours ago so debating if we should give her anything at all - though I know last time we skipped she went up to 500 in the night. Thank you for the links, I will read through everything tonight.
 
The 1/2 unit dose sounds like a good plan.

If you want to get rid of the Libre, most of the people here use a hand held blood glucose meter to test. It's not as much data as the Libre, but it's what we all did before the Libre came out. Some videos for when you have time to see how it's down here: Hometesting Links and Tips

If you do decide to stick with the Libre, we have people here who know how to take off the old one and put a new on one themselves, saving that vet visit each time.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top