Okay, let's start part of this over.
1]
JJ & Gwyn wrote:
But, as PZI-Vet is no longer being made, I don't think it's a good choice for a newly-diagnosed cat.
Gator & H wrote:
Why? ProZinc works just like PZI Vet and you said you liked PZI Vet!
In the above exchange, I read it as you taking exception to the fact that I would not recommend PZI-Vet for newbies, and that's what I responded to.
In re-reading the thread, I think that you quoted the wrong part of my initial post and were actually taking exception to the part where I said I that another possible insulin was ProZinc:
And there's ProZinc, which the manufacturer is touting as the replacement insulin for PZI-Vet. But it's only been on the market for ~11 weeks. There are several folks who like it and I know one person whose cat had a problem with it. Overall, I'd like to see more information about it before I'd choose it for my Gwyn (mostly because Gwyn has a history of having odd reactions to insulins).
If you are asking my objections to ProZinc are, I re-iterate: it's been on the market for a comparatively short time. There just isn't the depth of knowledge about it that the more established insulins have gathered. For folks who want to try ProZinc and help gather that data, I applaud them. I'm not one of them.
2]
I'm not sure why you seem to think that I'm dissing ProZinc. I specifically state that ProZinc is among my second-place choices:
If I was starting out with a newly diagnosed cat today, I would probably opt for Levemir as my first choice, with Lantus, compounded PZI and ProZinc as my second choices.
3]
The final area of disagreement seems to be here:
ProZinc is *not* identical to PZI-Vet.
> Not identical? I'm not even sure how to approach that. I invite you to come into PZI land and look at the kitties SS that are on ProZinc and see if you think there is enough difference to be suggesting all the hand wringing.
You are saying that the insulins produce similar (close to identical)
effects in the cats you've looked at. I'm not disputing that.
I am saying that
THE INGREDIENTS ARE DIFFERENT. Different ingredients *can* mean different reactions for those who are sensitive to those ingredients.
Since a product with large amounts of adverse reactions never makes it to market, it is only after a product has been on the market for some time that information about 'odd-ball' adverse reactions starts to be accumulated. Given that I have a cat who
has had odd reactions to several insulins, I am extremely cautious about reactions to ingredients, and my preference is to wait some period of time for additional information to accumulate.
So again: my personal preference would be to have more information on ProZinc before I started a cat on it. That's my opinion, which I shared when the original poster asked folks for their opinions on available insulins. The fact that there is a groups of cats who started on or switched to ProZinc without problems, or that you yourself are less risk-adverse than I am does not make my opinion less valid.