Hi all,
My cat was just diagnosed with diabetes earlier this week. I have spent the past few days trying to "educate myself" about feline diabetes and wound up nowhere except at the top of a statue of liberty sized pile of confusion. Right now Marmalade is on a one unit of Prozinc twice daily.
My vet offered us some prescription dry food, and we turned it down because he and our other cat (Molasses) turned it (and the M/D wet) down when Molasses was having tummy troubles a couple of years ago. I am glad now because most of the places on the net that I have been to say that dry food is not the best for Marmalade, period, full stop. Luckily, he already prefers canned, it is Molasses who will have to switch to canned, he is the picky eater and likes some flavors of Fancy Feast (FF), but not others but prefers dry. They have both been eating Fancy Feast (FF) since kittenhood and I have looked at the food list and am trying to make myself a shopping list of the best flavors. I know that it says less than 10 carbs (on the list) is good, and I am assuming from an email that the protien number on the list needs to be higher than the fat number. Is that an accurate assumption? Is there already a "shopping list" available?
I am still in a state of Nervous Nellie when I "shoot" Marmalade, because I hate needles for myself, and I am an easily stressed epileptic (hence my reason for being here), and stress can make sizures more likely. I will have to learn to be comfortable shooting him before I can do blood tests. You know, a one step at a time routine. My vet did not even mention blood tests at home, and when I asked the techs that were teaching me to give insulin about blood tests, they said I needed to buy a pet glucometer because human ones do not work for cats or dogs. I had read the evening before, on some sites, that isn't always true and I plan to talk to my vet about that when I speak to her next time. I cannot change vet clinics, because (epilepsy) I cannot drive, and there are no others nearby, so I am literally in a "do the best I can" situation. I love my kitties, and want to do the best I can for them, but other factors mean that some compromises have to be made.
Some sites say that a flat out food switch is easier, others (like this) say that a slower transition is better, will switching him from his "any FF flavor" diet to an "only low carb" ones cause problems of some kind? I ask this because I have read all of the horror stories about the "if you don't" and if you do", but there is so much contradiction, it is just a pain in the tail. As far as I have been told by the tests done by the vet, he is healthy other than the diabetes.
Anyhow, I will likely have more, but this is it for now.
Thanks
My cat was just diagnosed with diabetes earlier this week. I have spent the past few days trying to "educate myself" about feline diabetes and wound up nowhere except at the top of a statue of liberty sized pile of confusion. Right now Marmalade is on a one unit of Prozinc twice daily.
My vet offered us some prescription dry food, and we turned it down because he and our other cat (Molasses) turned it (and the M/D wet) down when Molasses was having tummy troubles a couple of years ago. I am glad now because most of the places on the net that I have been to say that dry food is not the best for Marmalade, period, full stop. Luckily, he already prefers canned, it is Molasses who will have to switch to canned, he is the picky eater and likes some flavors of Fancy Feast (FF), but not others but prefers dry. They have both been eating Fancy Feast (FF) since kittenhood and I have looked at the food list and am trying to make myself a shopping list of the best flavors. I know that it says less than 10 carbs (on the list) is good, and I am assuming from an email that the protien number on the list needs to be higher than the fat number. Is that an accurate assumption? Is there already a "shopping list" available?
I am still in a state of Nervous Nellie when I "shoot" Marmalade, because I hate needles for myself, and I am an easily stressed epileptic (hence my reason for being here), and stress can make sizures more likely. I will have to learn to be comfortable shooting him before I can do blood tests. You know, a one step at a time routine. My vet did not even mention blood tests at home, and when I asked the techs that were teaching me to give insulin about blood tests, they said I needed to buy a pet glucometer because human ones do not work for cats or dogs. I had read the evening before, on some sites, that isn't always true and I plan to talk to my vet about that when I speak to her next time. I cannot change vet clinics, because (epilepsy) I cannot drive, and there are no others nearby, so I am literally in a "do the best I can" situation. I love my kitties, and want to do the best I can for them, but other factors mean that some compromises have to be made.
Some sites say that a flat out food switch is easier, others (like this) say that a slower transition is better, will switching him from his "any FF flavor" diet to an "only low carb" ones cause problems of some kind? I ask this because I have read all of the horror stories about the "if you don't" and if you do", but there is so much contradiction, it is just a pain in the tail. As far as I have been told by the tests done by the vet, he is healthy other than the diabetes.
Anyhow, I will likely have more, but this is it for now.
Thanks