Re: Newly Diagnosed Kitty fighting for his life. Please help
Hi Christie!
Everyone who comes here says almost the exact same thing about testing! (although I think you're the first one I've ever seen to suggest it'd be easier to teach the cat to test themselves...What an idea!!! :lol: :lol: )
What most cats react to isn't really the poking. It's that you're touching their ears. They seem to hate it, so the "trick" is to get them used to having their ears fooled with. Decide on one place that works best for you to test and take Gambit there as often as possible, and just give his ears a quick rub and then give him a yummy treat. Freeze dried chicken, boiled chicken, deli meats (no sugar or salt) are all good choices, but there are many other
Low Carb Treats you can try. As he gets more used to having his ears touched, and gets rewarded for letting you do it, he'll soon learn to associate that "testing spot" with the yummy treats, and won't pay any attention to what you're doing with his ears. Another thing I've suggested to people is to sing to yourself. It occupies your brain so you tend to relax. Cats feed off our emotions, so if you approach them already scared and worried, that's what they're going to pick up on. I promise you it really works, and it gets much easier!!
As for the all day Pet testing/monitoring at your vets office, that's called a glucose curve, and besides costing a lot of money to pay a vet to do it, it's not going to really give you much in the way of useful information. When a cat is under stress, like at the vets office, their blood glucose readings can go up as much as 200 points. The vet see's these artificially inflated numbers and assumes the cat isn't getting enough insulin and tells you to increase. You return home, Gambit calms down and you're overdosing him...which can lead to tragic consequences.
Give the desensitization a try for a few days and see if he starts to relax when he's on his "testing spot". If you can get to the point where you can test him without problems, you can do a curve at home to get a really accurate view of how the insulin is working.
I promise if you took the time to go back to everyone's first few days here, you'd hear the exact same story about testing. Almost without fail, within a week or so, they're all telling someone else new that it IS possible, their cats don't hate them, and a lot of the times, the cat starts going to their special spot on their own to remind us it's time to test!!