Welcome Kelly and Bailey!
Wonderful to see that you are reading and asking questions! Bailey is on a good, mild insulin. I would continue to feed the wet low carb food. If you check our food charts:
Janet and Binky’s chart,
Purina DM dry is 13% carbs.
We try to feed under 8% carbs. Not only is it the carbs, it's that dry food is not a good diet for a carnivore. A vet explains why here:
www.catinfo.org So, if you can switch all your cats over to wet food, it might save another one from developing diabetes!
Hometesting is the best way to keep Bailey safe. We urge you to test before each shot to make sure it is safe to give the amount of insulin you are planning on and midcycle to see how the insulin is working - how low it is taking him. Here is how we do it:
Video for hometesting Here is a shopping list:
What you need to start hometesting
A human glucometer. Any one that sips and takes a tiny sample is fine. We do stay away from any meter with True in the name and the Freestyle meters. They have proven to be very unreliable and read lower than other meters. The meters are often free at drug stores; it’s the strips that are expensive. You can, however, buy them on ebay at less than half the price of stores. Lots of people here also like the ReliOn from Walmart. It is an inexpensive meter and its strips are the cheapest around. Try the meter out on yourself or someone else before you try it on your cat. You want to be familiar with it before you poke the cat.
Lancets and a lancet device. Usually, until the ears “learn” to bleed, a 26-28 gauge is good. Any brand will work as long as the lancets match your device.
Ketone strips. (Ketostix) Just like human diabetics use. You will sometimes need to test urine if the numbers are high.
Rice sack. Make this out of thinnish sock, filled with raw rice or oatmeal and then knotted. You heat this in the microwave until very warm but not hot. Then heat the ears before poking. You can also use a prescription bottle filled with very warm water. It provides a good surface to poke against.
Also nice to have. Flashlight: so you can look at the ears and find the little capillaries that come off the vein running down the ear. Vaseline: Put a tiny smear where you want to poke. It will help the blood bead up.
And some lo carb treats to give your kitty, successful test or not
Lo carb treats
And in case that isn't enough reading :mrgreen: , here is a document with lots of information on ProZinc:
http://www.felinediabetes.com/FDMB/viewtopic.php?f=24&t=32799
His legs are probably neuropathy:
Neuropathy As the article suggests, the B12 helps. It also helps when his numbers become more regulated.
Keep reading and ask lots of questions. Everyone who replies to you is paying it forward for help they received when they were new and scared!