Hello everyone!
Man, what an emotional few weeks this has been with our cat Bootie (10 years old, indoor cat). We noticed that he was drinking/peeing a lot more than normal, so I did some research online and saw that was a common symptom of diabetes. took him to the vet, and sure enough...my boy's got it. :YMSIGH:
We first just switched his diet to the Purina diabetic food (D/M maybe?) and let that run for a week. He seemed to be doing better, maybe still a bit lazier than normal, so we brought him back to the vet to see if his diabetes was under control just with a new diet (it happens sometimes!) Unfortunately, the blood sugar levels didn't go down enough...so we began the insulin injections.
We've got him on 1 unit (I can't remember the specific insulin, I just know it's a human one) twice a day after meal feeding him. He continued to get more lethargic...usually if we sit on the couch, this guy immediately comes and lays next to you for a petting. And usually, he likes to be COMFY...if you lay a piece of clothing on the bed or couch, he lays on it. Now he's completely the opposite...lays on hard surfaces only, in the corner of the room, etc.
Two days ago he started to have labored breathing with a couple of those "I don't feel so good" yowls that they do. Again I did my research online and saw that this might be a sign of his blood sugar being too low and him having ketones in his system. It sounded serious, so I took him to the vet again. Did the check, no keytones. Now here's where things get iffy for me...
The doctor hears a heart murmur. We've know about this for 2 years now, and it hasn't really affected the cat at all. They do an x-ray and the vet *thinks* that his heart is bigger than normal (he said there's never a good way to tell because there's no point of reference???). There was also no real signs of fluid in the lungs. In any case, he says "well maybe he could handle his heart murmur before, but now that he has diabetes too...maybe it's too much for him and now he's breathing heavy". That's a lot of maybes for me...I'm an Electrical Engineer, I respond well to "maybe" ;-)
So anyway, he suggests that we do an EKG on the cat to see if there's an issue with his heart not getting enough oxygen to his body (weak heart, thick heart walls, etc) and sends us to some emergency hospital an hour away (seems that all the normal vets that do EKGs are at some convention in California this week). We go there, and long story short (who am I kidding, i'm wordy!) they want $2500-$3500 for this EKG! They added hundreds of dollars for just unbelievable stuff, all for one test! We told them we would speak with our vet in the morning about finding a non-emergency doctor to perform the test.
None of this feels right to me...I'm *very* skeptical of doctors in general, and in the past I have been gouged with both vets and human doctors alike. In my logical brain, I'm thinking "cat gets diabetes, cat starts taking insulin, cat starts breathing heavy...must be something either diabetes or insulin related". I love my cat, but I just can't justify spending that much on a test that feels has nothing to do with the current situation at hand.
Anyone have some feedback/insight on this? Thank you SO much in advance!
Man, what an emotional few weeks this has been with our cat Bootie (10 years old, indoor cat). We noticed that he was drinking/peeing a lot more than normal, so I did some research online and saw that was a common symptom of diabetes. took him to the vet, and sure enough...my boy's got it. :YMSIGH:
We first just switched his diet to the Purina diabetic food (D/M maybe?) and let that run for a week. He seemed to be doing better, maybe still a bit lazier than normal, so we brought him back to the vet to see if his diabetes was under control just with a new diet (it happens sometimes!) Unfortunately, the blood sugar levels didn't go down enough...so we began the insulin injections.
We've got him on 1 unit (I can't remember the specific insulin, I just know it's a human one) twice a day after meal feeding him. He continued to get more lethargic...usually if we sit on the couch, this guy immediately comes and lays next to you for a petting. And usually, he likes to be COMFY...if you lay a piece of clothing on the bed or couch, he lays on it. Now he's completely the opposite...lays on hard surfaces only, in the corner of the room, etc.
Two days ago he started to have labored breathing with a couple of those "I don't feel so good" yowls that they do. Again I did my research online and saw that this might be a sign of his blood sugar being too low and him having ketones in his system. It sounded serious, so I took him to the vet again. Did the check, no keytones. Now here's where things get iffy for me...
The doctor hears a heart murmur. We've know about this for 2 years now, and it hasn't really affected the cat at all. They do an x-ray and the vet *thinks* that his heart is bigger than normal (he said there's never a good way to tell because there's no point of reference???). There was also no real signs of fluid in the lungs. In any case, he says "well maybe he could handle his heart murmur before, but now that he has diabetes too...maybe it's too much for him and now he's breathing heavy". That's a lot of maybes for me...I'm an Electrical Engineer, I respond well to "maybe" ;-)
So anyway, he suggests that we do an EKG on the cat to see if there's an issue with his heart not getting enough oxygen to his body (weak heart, thick heart walls, etc) and sends us to some emergency hospital an hour away (seems that all the normal vets that do EKGs are at some convention in California this week). We go there, and long story short (who am I kidding, i'm wordy!) they want $2500-$3500 for this EKG! They added hundreds of dollars for just unbelievable stuff, all for one test! We told them we would speak with our vet in the morning about finding a non-emergency doctor to perform the test.
None of this feels right to me...I'm *very* skeptical of doctors in general, and in the past I have been gouged with both vets and human doctors alike. In my logical brain, I'm thinking "cat gets diabetes, cat starts taking insulin, cat starts breathing heavy...must be something either diabetes or insulin related". I love my cat, but I just can't justify spending that much on a test that feels has nothing to do with the current situation at hand.
Anyone have some feedback/insight on this? Thank you SO much in advance!