RenaRF
Member Since 2011
I'm not new to the board (my sweet Clide was a diet-controlled diabetic and I do home test - we lost him to cancer in early March of this year.
) but I am new to the whole "Give insulin / don't give insulin / if BG is X, give Y insulin etc.
I'm fostering the awesome Henry. Henry has been being treated and stabilized at the vet's from 4/7/13 - yesterday, 4/17/13. He came in with BGs over 600. His owner declined to treat him, so we have brought Henry in under rescue and he has been given over to my care.
Initial treatment at the vet's was 1u of Lantus every 12 hours with frequent BG checks. They also switched him to the Royal Canin diabetic wet food - 14% calories from carbs - not my favorite choice but I'll revisit that issue in my questions. In putting him on the Lantus he was really all over the map BG wise - 500s for highs, 70s for lows. As those gaps and swings started closing a bit, they knocked him back to 1/2u Lantus every 12 hours. They still saw some pretty huge swings, so two or three days ago he went to 1/2u of Lantus once daily. Yesterday at morning BG check, he was like 254. They gave him the 1/2u and he dropped to the low 60s. SO. Their guidance to me was that I NOT give him any insulin if his BG was was below 300 on my meter (which is, of course, different than the under 200 rule of thumb. But every cat is different, right?
So this morning I tested him - it was very difficult to get blood from his ear! Grrr! But he was VERY patient with me, and eventually we got it done. His BG was 262 at 8am, so I did NOT administer insulin and I fed him. I will retest at noon today (in about half an hour).
So my questions are this:
1. Given that he's only been on Lantus for about 11 days now, is it wise to totally not give him insulin? I had read advice to go with .25u in a circumstance like Henry's. I'm hesitant to strike out and do anything on my own here - but I'm worried that I'm basically interrupting his insulin when he's very new to it, and that I'm undoing whatever good was done.
2. If, at noon, his BG is ABOVE 300, should I give the insulin then?? How does this work? Do I need to wait until tomorrow AM despite what periodic 4-hour results are to give insulin? What if I give insulin at noon and then at 4pm he is still over 300? Do I give it then, too? I would imagine not - but I'm looking for the rules and guidelines here in this situation.
3. I want to change his diet. I don't have to do it right away, but it needs to happen. I think the RC diabetic is way too high in carbs, and the ingredients are crap. I want to get him onto the Merrick low carb varieties. But I'm worried about doing that and trying to get my head around getting him regulated.
4. Finally - if he's consistently coming in under 300, should I just switch his diet and try to make the change to OTJ status from there?
Ugh. I'm confused.
Rena
I'm fostering the awesome Henry. Henry has been being treated and stabilized at the vet's from 4/7/13 - yesterday, 4/17/13. He came in with BGs over 600. His owner declined to treat him, so we have brought Henry in under rescue and he has been given over to my care.
Initial treatment at the vet's was 1u of Lantus every 12 hours with frequent BG checks. They also switched him to the Royal Canin diabetic wet food - 14% calories from carbs - not my favorite choice but I'll revisit that issue in my questions. In putting him on the Lantus he was really all over the map BG wise - 500s for highs, 70s for lows. As those gaps and swings started closing a bit, they knocked him back to 1/2u Lantus every 12 hours. They still saw some pretty huge swings, so two or three days ago he went to 1/2u of Lantus once daily. Yesterday at morning BG check, he was like 254. They gave him the 1/2u and he dropped to the low 60s. SO. Their guidance to me was that I NOT give him any insulin if his BG was was below 300 on my meter (which is, of course, different than the under 200 rule of thumb. But every cat is different, right?
So this morning I tested him - it was very difficult to get blood from his ear! Grrr! But he was VERY patient with me, and eventually we got it done. His BG was 262 at 8am, so I did NOT administer insulin and I fed him. I will retest at noon today (in about half an hour).
So my questions are this:
1. Given that he's only been on Lantus for about 11 days now, is it wise to totally not give him insulin? I had read advice to go with .25u in a circumstance like Henry's. I'm hesitant to strike out and do anything on my own here - but I'm worried that I'm basically interrupting his insulin when he's very new to it, and that I'm undoing whatever good was done.
2. If, at noon, his BG is ABOVE 300, should I give the insulin then?? How does this work? Do I need to wait until tomorrow AM despite what periodic 4-hour results are to give insulin? What if I give insulin at noon and then at 4pm he is still over 300? Do I give it then, too? I would imagine not - but I'm looking for the rules and guidelines here in this situation.
3. I want to change his diet. I don't have to do it right away, but it needs to happen. I think the RC diabetic is way too high in carbs, and the ingredients are crap. I want to get him onto the Merrick low carb varieties. But I'm worried about doing that and trying to get my head around getting him regulated.
4. Finally - if he's consistently coming in under 300, should I just switch his diet and try to make the change to OTJ status from there?
Ugh. I'm confused.
Rena