Bockscar & Cloe
Member Since 2023
Hi, all!
I’m Cloe, and my cat, Bockscar, has recently been diagnosed with Diabetes. My boyfriend and I adopted her in September 2022, and she got SUPER SICK. Took her to the vet and got the diabetes diagnosis around the holidays. The good news is once she started on insulin she got so much better, acted like a cat again! But, at all her glucose curves at all day vet visits, she seemed unresponsive to insulin.
After many of these curves, each time our vet upping her dosage by 1 unit, till she was prescribed 6 units in our U-100 syringes (forgive me, I’m not certain of how to describe the amount). Our vet said that was incredibly high for a cat and she would generally never go beyond 4 units. But, Bockscar was not responding so… here we were.
Once we started giving her 6 units, she turned evil. Being super mean and hitting her sister, Sledge, like she had never before. Growling and becoming incredibly obsessive over food. We have started using a slow feed bowl as she would eat her food so fast it seemed unhealthy. Never seen any animal inhale food like she was. She bullies Sledge and steals her food and inhales it too. She will also eat any human food we leave out, and so we hide it from her all the time. She once ate my spatula because it had sauce on it (she was fine, but worried me sick).
This is all very unlike her, as until we started giving these large amounts of insulin she seemed healthy! She went from crazy sick, not moving, chugging water, not cuddling, very concerning, to being healthy on insulin. She was jumping and cuddly and playing, not being mean to Sledge or going insane over food, or stealing anything that seemed edible. Her behavior was so bad and she was so mean to Sledge she seemed sick again in the opposite way.
After a lot of research, I learned that cats can show high blood glucose due to stress at the vet, and that can result in upping the dosage too much. I have, without consulting the vet, reduced her back down to 5 units of insulin. We give her insulin twice a day, 8pm and 8am. Even that change has seemed to make her feel better. She’s still crazy about food and steals anything she can. But she’s hitting Sledge less, and in general her disposition is calmer and she seems happier.
I’m concerned 5 units is still too much, and we have accidentally been creating this extreme high and extreme low in her blood glucose. As our vet said that even 4 units of insulin was a lot, I feel she may need even less. I’m not comfortable making more changes until I have some numbers to go on.
I would like to begin testing her BG at home, but have no idea where to begin. We can’t afford to spend lots and lots, but I want her to be healthy! I know they have the pet specific glucometer, I think Alphatrak? Is the OneTouch Ultra ok? From what I’ve seen, others have success and it is so much less expensive!
Also, any advice or resources on where to learn more about how to read the tests and what the numbers mean would be greatly appreciated. Apologies on how long this is, but I feel the entire story is important in seeking advice. My boyfriend and I have never dealt with this and are totally lost on how to help her better. Thank you all so much!!
I’m Cloe, and my cat, Bockscar, has recently been diagnosed with Diabetes. My boyfriend and I adopted her in September 2022, and she got SUPER SICK. Took her to the vet and got the diabetes diagnosis around the holidays. The good news is once she started on insulin she got so much better, acted like a cat again! But, at all her glucose curves at all day vet visits, she seemed unresponsive to insulin.
After many of these curves, each time our vet upping her dosage by 1 unit, till she was prescribed 6 units in our U-100 syringes (forgive me, I’m not certain of how to describe the amount). Our vet said that was incredibly high for a cat and she would generally never go beyond 4 units. But, Bockscar was not responding so… here we were.
Once we started giving her 6 units, she turned evil. Being super mean and hitting her sister, Sledge, like she had never before. Growling and becoming incredibly obsessive over food. We have started using a slow feed bowl as she would eat her food so fast it seemed unhealthy. Never seen any animal inhale food like she was. She bullies Sledge and steals her food and inhales it too. She will also eat any human food we leave out, and so we hide it from her all the time. She once ate my spatula because it had sauce on it (she was fine, but worried me sick).
This is all very unlike her, as until we started giving these large amounts of insulin she seemed healthy! She went from crazy sick, not moving, chugging water, not cuddling, very concerning, to being healthy on insulin. She was jumping and cuddly and playing, not being mean to Sledge or going insane over food, or stealing anything that seemed edible. Her behavior was so bad and she was so mean to Sledge she seemed sick again in the opposite way.
After a lot of research, I learned that cats can show high blood glucose due to stress at the vet, and that can result in upping the dosage too much. I have, without consulting the vet, reduced her back down to 5 units of insulin. We give her insulin twice a day, 8pm and 8am. Even that change has seemed to make her feel better. She’s still crazy about food and steals anything she can. But she’s hitting Sledge less, and in general her disposition is calmer and she seems happier.
I’m concerned 5 units is still too much, and we have accidentally been creating this extreme high and extreme low in her blood glucose. As our vet said that even 4 units of insulin was a lot, I feel she may need even less. I’m not comfortable making more changes until I have some numbers to go on.
I would like to begin testing her BG at home, but have no idea where to begin. We can’t afford to spend lots and lots, but I want her to be healthy! I know they have the pet specific glucometer, I think Alphatrak? Is the OneTouch Ultra ok? From what I’ve seen, others have success and it is so much less expensive!
Also, any advice or resources on where to learn more about how to read the tests and what the numbers mean would be greatly appreciated. Apologies on how long this is, but I feel the entire story is important in seeking advice. My boyfriend and I have never dealt with this and are totally lost on how to help her better. Thank you all so much!!

