AliceL
Active Member
Hello!
I need help and guidance on how to treat my cat Evie.
She was officially diagnosed with diabetes on 4th May.
Here is a timeline of what's happened to date:
Nov 2022 - Evie and I immigrated to Portugal. She weighed 6,7kg/14,7lb when we left. For the last 2 years she has been eating Royal Canin Lightweight diet kibble with a packet of standard jelly based wet food in the evening.
Dec 2022 - Vet visit in Portugal revealed that she now weighed 6.2kg/13.6lb, we put it down to the stress of traveling.
Jan 2022 - I notice she is not really eating her kibble as vigorously as she used to. This would be very unusual except we have recently changed countries and the food is different so I think she is just being fussy.
Feb 2022 - I take her back to the vet who finds that she has a gum infection, bad gingivitis. They assign blame to a flareup of her herpes virus since we travelled recently and stress causes flareups of this usually dormant virus. Evie has had FHV since being a kitten. They issue a three month course of immunotherapy meds to try help get it under control before taking the next extreme step of getting all her teeth removed - it sometimes happens with FHV cats. She now weighs 5,5kg/12lb which I find concerning but vet said its to be expected with the gum infection. I started giving her cat porridge at most meals to help her maintain weight - basically kibble softened with warm water - and still continue her evening pouch of wet food.
28th April - I brought Evie into the vet because I just thought she was looking extra scrawny. I'm shocked to discover that she now weighs 4.1kg/9lb. I insist they double check everything else, surely this can't just be from a gum infection. They do an X-ray and blood tests, find her blood glucose is 405. They presume diabetes and want to do a fructosamine test to be sure.
Thanks to a quick google on diabetic cats I don't wait for further instruction and jump into gear going cold turkey on the kibble immediately and replace all her meals with a high quality grain-free wet food I managed to find in a speciality store. The whole food issue is another story for a different thread because it is complicated in Portugal where everything is in Portuguese and I'm still figuring out what her best options are here. But I refuse to go back to kibble.
4th May - the vet confirms her fructosamine test came back as 600 and it IS diabetes. To date she had no symptoms except the weight loss.
5th May - She has an insulin curve test. She starts on Prozinc with the lowest unit requirement for her weight which is 0.8U. Her glucose monitor levels go from starting at 262 at 9am to 210 at 6pm. I ask the vet why her glucose via monitor is now 262 to start with when her blood lab results were 405 last week, vet said that's right and it doesn't mean her sugar level improved since the change to wet food....is that correct? Is there usually such a vast difference between the two tests?
She had a sonogram yesterday to check for pancreatitis or tumours, no news yet. If all clear the vet will increase her insulin as she is still testing around 260 in the morning, I take her into the vet to have her glucose checked every 2 days or so as I don't have a monitor yet. Side note - vet doesn't want me to test myself, says it is traumatic for Evie.
The vet also wants me to feed her twice a day only but Evie won't tolerate it. She vomits if she doesn't eat for long periods so I feed her at 7am, 1pm and 7pm. She tolerates the overnight stretch because she sleeps solidly like a human from 9pm-6am. I'd like to increase to 4 feedings per day if possible. Not sure what the best is for a diabetic kitty.
Currently she is on 4 pouches of food per day which is right for her current weight but she does need to put on more weight. She is on daily anti inflammatory for her mouth issues and her voracious appetite has thankfully returned. Vet wants to start kibble again for weight gain but I'm wary of that.
Any advice and tips? I'm so overwhelmed by all the info out there plus I can't help feeling a bit suspicious of the vet's advice that seems a bit misguided.
I need help and guidance on how to treat my cat Evie.
She was officially diagnosed with diabetes on 4th May.
Here is a timeline of what's happened to date:
Nov 2022 - Evie and I immigrated to Portugal. She weighed 6,7kg/14,7lb when we left. For the last 2 years she has been eating Royal Canin Lightweight diet kibble with a packet of standard jelly based wet food in the evening.
Dec 2022 - Vet visit in Portugal revealed that she now weighed 6.2kg/13.6lb, we put it down to the stress of traveling.
Jan 2022 - I notice she is not really eating her kibble as vigorously as she used to. This would be very unusual except we have recently changed countries and the food is different so I think she is just being fussy.
Feb 2022 - I take her back to the vet who finds that she has a gum infection, bad gingivitis. They assign blame to a flareup of her herpes virus since we travelled recently and stress causes flareups of this usually dormant virus. Evie has had FHV since being a kitten. They issue a three month course of immunotherapy meds to try help get it under control before taking the next extreme step of getting all her teeth removed - it sometimes happens with FHV cats. She now weighs 5,5kg/12lb which I find concerning but vet said its to be expected with the gum infection. I started giving her cat porridge at most meals to help her maintain weight - basically kibble softened with warm water - and still continue her evening pouch of wet food.
28th April - I brought Evie into the vet because I just thought she was looking extra scrawny. I'm shocked to discover that she now weighs 4.1kg/9lb. I insist they double check everything else, surely this can't just be from a gum infection. They do an X-ray and blood tests, find her blood glucose is 405. They presume diabetes and want to do a fructosamine test to be sure.
Thanks to a quick google on diabetic cats I don't wait for further instruction and jump into gear going cold turkey on the kibble immediately and replace all her meals with a high quality grain-free wet food I managed to find in a speciality store. The whole food issue is another story for a different thread because it is complicated in Portugal where everything is in Portuguese and I'm still figuring out what her best options are here. But I refuse to go back to kibble.
4th May - the vet confirms her fructosamine test came back as 600 and it IS diabetes. To date she had no symptoms except the weight loss.
5th May - She has an insulin curve test. She starts on Prozinc with the lowest unit requirement for her weight which is 0.8U. Her glucose monitor levels go from starting at 262 at 9am to 210 at 6pm. I ask the vet why her glucose via monitor is now 262 to start with when her blood lab results were 405 last week, vet said that's right and it doesn't mean her sugar level improved since the change to wet food....is that correct? Is there usually such a vast difference between the two tests?
She had a sonogram yesterday to check for pancreatitis or tumours, no news yet. If all clear the vet will increase her insulin as she is still testing around 260 in the morning, I take her into the vet to have her glucose checked every 2 days or so as I don't have a monitor yet. Side note - vet doesn't want me to test myself, says it is traumatic for Evie.
The vet also wants me to feed her twice a day only but Evie won't tolerate it. She vomits if she doesn't eat for long periods so I feed her at 7am, 1pm and 7pm. She tolerates the overnight stretch because she sleeps solidly like a human from 9pm-6am. I'd like to increase to 4 feedings per day if possible. Not sure what the best is for a diabetic kitty.
Currently she is on 4 pouches of food per day which is right for her current weight but she does need to put on more weight. She is on daily anti inflammatory for her mouth issues and her voracious appetite has thankfully returned. Vet wants to start kibble again for weight gain but I'm wary of that.
Any advice and tips? I'm so overwhelmed by all the info out there plus I can't help feeling a bit suspicious of the vet's advice that seems a bit misguided.