Meghan Murphy
New Member
Hi everyone,
I am new here and wanted to introduce my 14 year old kitty, Cami to the group. She was diagnosed with diabetes in late February this year, which was closely followed by a dramatic stay in the pet ER where they helped get her electrolytes back on track and determined that she also requires a potassium supplement in addition to insulin.
Cami is currently on prozinc and was taking 4 units twice a day until this past Saturday (June 22) following a vet visit. They advised that we increase her dose to 5.5 units twice a day which we started on the June 22 evening dose. I attached two files - the file called "Cami Curve" shows her readings prior to the vet visit and we brought it with us to discuss, the second file called "Cami Glucose Readings" shows what happened since then.
Previously, on the 4 unit dose, her glucose levels were dropping and for a time were pretty steady in the mid 300s (not regulated, but fairly consistent and we started to see a decrease in thirst and pee which was great!). Her levels started to increase just before our scheduled vet visit to the low 400s, with some sporadic readings above 500. We were not sure why the readings increased since no other variables have changed. The vet gave her an antibiotic injection thinking the higher readings might be due to a UTI, but didn't do any testing.
Since increasing the dose to 5.5, her blood glucose has seemed to increase dramatically. Readings today were in the 500s, including the high 500s just before her evening dose. We are alarmed that the increased insulin dose has seemed to have a reverse effect!
Cami eats purina pro plan DM wet food and has about 2 cans per day (one in the morning and one in the evening). She is constantly hungry and I know the food isn't being processed correctly, which is tough for us to watch.
Wondering if anyone has advice or words of wisdom. We are trying to be patient and are sad that our kitty seems to be so stressed.
(Note that this dose increase was more than our typical increase. We previously only increased 1 unit at a time.)
I am new here and wanted to introduce my 14 year old kitty, Cami to the group. She was diagnosed with diabetes in late February this year, which was closely followed by a dramatic stay in the pet ER where they helped get her electrolytes back on track and determined that she also requires a potassium supplement in addition to insulin.
Cami is currently on prozinc and was taking 4 units twice a day until this past Saturday (June 22) following a vet visit. They advised that we increase her dose to 5.5 units twice a day which we started on the June 22 evening dose. I attached two files - the file called "Cami Curve" shows her readings prior to the vet visit and we brought it with us to discuss, the second file called "Cami Glucose Readings" shows what happened since then.
Previously, on the 4 unit dose, her glucose levels were dropping and for a time were pretty steady in the mid 300s (not regulated, but fairly consistent and we started to see a decrease in thirst and pee which was great!). Her levels started to increase just before our scheduled vet visit to the low 400s, with some sporadic readings above 500. We were not sure why the readings increased since no other variables have changed. The vet gave her an antibiotic injection thinking the higher readings might be due to a UTI, but didn't do any testing.
Since increasing the dose to 5.5, her blood glucose has seemed to increase dramatically. Readings today were in the 500s, including the high 500s just before her evening dose. We are alarmed that the increased insulin dose has seemed to have a reverse effect!
Cami eats purina pro plan DM wet food and has about 2 cans per day (one in the morning and one in the evening). She is constantly hungry and I know the food isn't being processed correctly, which is tough for us to watch.
Wondering if anyone has advice or words of wisdom. We are trying to be patient and are sad that our kitty seems to be so stressed.
(Note that this dose increase was more than our typical increase. We previously only increased 1 unit at a time.)