LamontsMom
Member Since 2015
I just started posting here a day or two ago. Was waiting for my cat Lamont's diagnosis.
He was diagnosed 20 minutes ago with diabetes Mellitis. His glucose was around 540, which is very high. I'm meeting with the vet on Saturday to go over everything.
I told her I had already switched him to low carb low phosphorus food (initially Blue Buffalo, today he's starting on Wellness). This is what she said:
She claims diet has absolutely no role in feline diabetes which I just don't believe. Aside from everything I've read online, it just doesn't make sense. My cat was eating Science Diet dry food for years, plus Greenies. Because I wasn't educated about feline nutrition, I thought I was giving him a healthy diet. Now that we're in crisis-mode, I realize how unhealthy that stuff is. I've read so many people's stories online about their cats who are in remission. I TOTALLY don't agree with her there and am hoping that with his new diet and insulin he can go into remission.
She felt that home testing is a good thing, but mentioned the urine sticks.
I told her I was concerned about hypcoglycemia and since I changed his diet (Sunday he was eating a mix of Science Diet dry and Blue Buffalo mature Healthy Aging dry plus 6 Greenies, by Monday he was on no Greenies, wet Buffalo with some dry Blue Buffalo mixed in; today he's on a mix of web Blue Buffalo Wilderness Mature and Wellness No Grain Chicken), I thought it would be smarter to have his diet totally adjusted, maybe for a month before starting insulin. She said she thought that was dangerous.
Instead, she's going to start him off at the lowest possible dosage of insulin and I guess he'll start on Sunday. She'll redo his blood in a week to test it and wants me to test his urine multiple times a day.
Is there anything (aside from diet) but just insulin/testing concerns I should ask/go in armed with when I speak with her Saturday? Any specific insulin that's preferred? I'm getting the initial kit from her but plan on buying the rest online. Any suggestions, tips, links, anything are greatly appreciated.
He was diagnosed 20 minutes ago with diabetes Mellitis. His glucose was around 540, which is very high. I'm meeting with the vet on Saturday to go over everything.
I told her I had already switched him to low carb low phosphorus food (initially Blue Buffalo, today he's starting on Wellness). This is what she said:
She claims diet has absolutely no role in feline diabetes which I just don't believe. Aside from everything I've read online, it just doesn't make sense. My cat was eating Science Diet dry food for years, plus Greenies. Because I wasn't educated about feline nutrition, I thought I was giving him a healthy diet. Now that we're in crisis-mode, I realize how unhealthy that stuff is. I've read so many people's stories online about their cats who are in remission. I TOTALLY don't agree with her there and am hoping that with his new diet and insulin he can go into remission.
She felt that home testing is a good thing, but mentioned the urine sticks.
I told her I was concerned about hypcoglycemia and since I changed his diet (Sunday he was eating a mix of Science Diet dry and Blue Buffalo mature Healthy Aging dry plus 6 Greenies, by Monday he was on no Greenies, wet Buffalo with some dry Blue Buffalo mixed in; today he's on a mix of web Blue Buffalo Wilderness Mature and Wellness No Grain Chicken), I thought it would be smarter to have his diet totally adjusted, maybe for a month before starting insulin. She said she thought that was dangerous.
Instead, she's going to start him off at the lowest possible dosage of insulin and I guess he'll start on Sunday. She'll redo his blood in a week to test it and wants me to test his urine multiple times a day.
Is there anything (aside from diet) but just insulin/testing concerns I should ask/go in armed with when I speak with her Saturday? Any specific insulin that's preferred? I'm getting the initial kit from her but plan on buying the rest online. Any suggestions, tips, links, anything are greatly appreciated.

