chuchunga
Member Since 2014
Hey Everyone,
I have a newly diagnosed 9 year old male baby boy named Tubz. His original weight at last years exam was 23lbs. These past few months we have seen a major decline in his health including all the diabetic symptoms of drinking constantly, flooding litter box, back hock neuropathy & a lost of 5lbs very quickly despite his continuous eating. His first blood test was March 4th 2014 and his BG results were 497. We immediately switched him over to all canned wet food. He is eating Friskies classic pate (about 1 1/2 cans a day divided into 2 large meals and 2 small snacks). After a week of being on just wet food he was retested and his BG was 333 after eating. On day two of the of starting the canned food diet the continuous drinking and flooding the litter box stopped and he is now going once to twice daily normal size pees.
So one week after his canned food diet started with his BG at 333 we started him on .5units of insulin (Lantus) twice daily 12 hours apart. Things have been going well with the shots. He has been eating well.
Two days ago I bought an over the counter human glucose testing meter (Relion micro) and started monitoring his BG before shots at home and testing at peak hours. Here is where things get a little tricky. My vet is not thrilled that I am not willing to use the "vet cat specific" testing meter. But I live in the real world and cant afford long term strip replacements for those things when I am already buying insulin, syringes & having constant trips to the vet for blood curve tests. (which by the way our first blood curve test is on the 25th, so he will have been on insulin for 2 weeks at that point).
So I was advised to bring in my human glucose meter to calibrate it to the one they have in the office. My meter is about 85 points lower than the one my vet uses and he said that was about 60% difference and explained what number I should go by on my home meter. My question is.....for those of you using a human meter to test your cats at home did you have to also calibrate your human meter to the "cat meter" and if so have you been successful with at home testing? Has anyone been given accuracy with a home meter without having to calibrate it? Please share any info you can b/c my biggest fear is A) not getting him regulated b) having him to into a hypoglycemic state.
Thanks in advance for any advise.
I have a newly diagnosed 9 year old male baby boy named Tubz. His original weight at last years exam was 23lbs. These past few months we have seen a major decline in his health including all the diabetic symptoms of drinking constantly, flooding litter box, back hock neuropathy & a lost of 5lbs very quickly despite his continuous eating. His first blood test was March 4th 2014 and his BG results were 497. We immediately switched him over to all canned wet food. He is eating Friskies classic pate (about 1 1/2 cans a day divided into 2 large meals and 2 small snacks). After a week of being on just wet food he was retested and his BG was 333 after eating. On day two of the of starting the canned food diet the continuous drinking and flooding the litter box stopped and he is now going once to twice daily normal size pees.
So one week after his canned food diet started with his BG at 333 we started him on .5units of insulin (Lantus) twice daily 12 hours apart. Things have been going well with the shots. He has been eating well.
Two days ago I bought an over the counter human glucose testing meter (Relion micro) and started monitoring his BG before shots at home and testing at peak hours. Here is where things get a little tricky. My vet is not thrilled that I am not willing to use the "vet cat specific" testing meter. But I live in the real world and cant afford long term strip replacements for those things when I am already buying insulin, syringes & having constant trips to the vet for blood curve tests. (which by the way our first blood curve test is on the 25th, so he will have been on insulin for 2 weeks at that point).
So I was advised to bring in my human glucose meter to calibrate it to the one they have in the office. My meter is about 85 points lower than the one my vet uses and he said that was about 60% difference and explained what number I should go by on my home meter. My question is.....for those of you using a human meter to test your cats at home did you have to also calibrate your human meter to the "cat meter" and if so have you been successful with at home testing? Has anyone been given accuracy with a home meter without having to calibrate it? Please share any info you can b/c my biggest fear is A) not getting him regulated b) having him to into a hypoglycemic state.
Thanks in advance for any advise.