Virginie & Chewie (GA)
Member Since 2022
Hi everyone,
My name is Virginie and I just signed up here to get advice regarding my 15-year-old cat Chewie.
Chewie has always been the healthiest of my kitties, until she damaged her back jumping off a tall bed in March this year. Vet diagnosed lumbar IVDD (rare in cats apparently), which was treated as follows: 5 days of buprenex BID for pain, a tapering course of prednisolone (5mg a day for 5 days, 2.5mg for 5 days then 2.5mg every other day for 5 days), and laser therapy/acupuncture once a week for 6 weeks. She recovered much better than the vet expected, she has a little shuffling walk with swaying hips now, and we put pet steps everywhere, so she gets around pretty well. She is also on twice monthly Adequan for arthritis, and takes an occasional 25mg of gabapentin on days when she seems sore.
I noticed over the past couple of months that she seemed hungrier than usual, but didn’t increase her food since I thought she had to stay lean to avoid putting pressure on her back and joints. Fast forward to her annual blood work on 7/16: her blood glucose levels were pretty high, higher than could be expected with stress hyperglycemia (she really freaks out at the vet’s, especially since her back injury), and she had lost weight (a pound since March). I can’t remember the exact number the vet gave me over the phone, but I’m planning on calling the office to get a copy of the bloodwork results tomorrow. Both the vet and I were confused, as she has no risk factors - not overweight, has always eaten grain-free canned food or raw food over the years (she’s been eating raw only - Darwin’s Naturals turkey mostly - for the past 7 years). The only thing she could think of was the course of prednisolone for her back, and she said she might be “on the tail end” of an episode brought upon by the pred, so she scheduled a recheck of urine glucose on 8/28.
Since then, I have been feeding her more and more: she used to get 42g of food 4 times a day (I have an IBD cat that needs small meals so everyone is on the same schedule) now I’m giving her 52g each meal, plus 4 pieces of kibble once a day in two tablespoons of canned pumpkin to help her transit. She has barely gained any weight back so far and she is absolutely ravenous. I have also never seen her drink so much water, even during heat waves.
My question is, do you guys think the hypothesis that she might be getting slowly better from diabetes caused earlier by the pred is likely? Should I wait the full time the vet wanted to wait to do the recheck, or call to move up her appt and ask for a fructosamine test instead of urine glucose?
It’s heartbreaking seeing her eat so much and not put on weight. I’m reweighing her tomorrow and hoping to see an improvement but I’m really worried waiting isn’t going to help. Hoping to get your experienced opinion to balance out my anxiety!
Edited to add: I couldn’t wait and reweighed her and she gained about 100g in a week (=3.5oz)
Thanks so much in advance,
Virginie and Chewie
My name is Virginie and I just signed up here to get advice regarding my 15-year-old cat Chewie.
Chewie has always been the healthiest of my kitties, until she damaged her back jumping off a tall bed in March this year. Vet diagnosed lumbar IVDD (rare in cats apparently), which was treated as follows: 5 days of buprenex BID for pain, a tapering course of prednisolone (5mg a day for 5 days, 2.5mg for 5 days then 2.5mg every other day for 5 days), and laser therapy/acupuncture once a week for 6 weeks. She recovered much better than the vet expected, she has a little shuffling walk with swaying hips now, and we put pet steps everywhere, so she gets around pretty well. She is also on twice monthly Adequan for arthritis, and takes an occasional 25mg of gabapentin on days when she seems sore.
I noticed over the past couple of months that she seemed hungrier than usual, but didn’t increase her food since I thought she had to stay lean to avoid putting pressure on her back and joints. Fast forward to her annual blood work on 7/16: her blood glucose levels were pretty high, higher than could be expected with stress hyperglycemia (she really freaks out at the vet’s, especially since her back injury), and she had lost weight (a pound since March). I can’t remember the exact number the vet gave me over the phone, but I’m planning on calling the office to get a copy of the bloodwork results tomorrow. Both the vet and I were confused, as she has no risk factors - not overweight, has always eaten grain-free canned food or raw food over the years (she’s been eating raw only - Darwin’s Naturals turkey mostly - for the past 7 years). The only thing she could think of was the course of prednisolone for her back, and she said she might be “on the tail end” of an episode brought upon by the pred, so she scheduled a recheck of urine glucose on 8/28.
Since then, I have been feeding her more and more: she used to get 42g of food 4 times a day (I have an IBD cat that needs small meals so everyone is on the same schedule) now I’m giving her 52g each meal, plus 4 pieces of kibble once a day in two tablespoons of canned pumpkin to help her transit. She has barely gained any weight back so far and she is absolutely ravenous. I have also never seen her drink so much water, even during heat waves.
My question is, do you guys think the hypothesis that she might be getting slowly better from diabetes caused earlier by the pred is likely? Should I wait the full time the vet wanted to wait to do the recheck, or call to move up her appt and ask for a fructosamine test instead of urine glucose?
It’s heartbreaking seeing her eat so much and not put on weight. I’m reweighing her tomorrow and hoping to see an improvement but I’m really worried waiting isn’t going to help. Hoping to get your experienced opinion to balance out my anxiety!
Edited to add: I couldn’t wait and reweighed her and she gained about 100g in a week (=3.5oz)
Thanks so much in advance,
Virginie and Chewie
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