Furby the 12-year old domestic longhair started drinking and urinating quite excessively a couple of weeks ago, and has now been diagnosed with diabetes. He did eat mostly better (...) quality commercial cat food (Iams, etc.), very little of the cheap stuff (Friskies and similar), and would hardly ever touch real food, such as chicken liver or real fish. His strategy was always to try to eat all the other cats' food first, then his, which is probably one of the reasons why he now has diabetes, he got up to 17+ lbs. His initial reading at the vets' was over 600. He is now on Hill's k/d - which he isn't crazy about - and initially got 1 unit of Lantus a day, which has now been increased to 1 1/2 units, since the 1 unit wasn't doing anything. He has a very good vet, who has known him since he was a little kitten, and who is very much of a fan of the go slow approach, hence the low initial dosage. I'm trying to get used to the new 'normal', those injections are nothing short of a horror movie, no wonder the demo shows them done on a hairless cat, Furby's hair is longer than the needle, he does NOT like his skin pinched, and is fully equipped with sharp nails and powerful fangs to make his point. Can't say I blame him, I'd rather ride my skateboard under a semi going 70 on a busy freeway than go anywhere near needles. Much less stressful. I'm learning the fine art of mixing the $ 200+ little tiny vial of liquid goldplatinumstockoptions and drawing the half drop or so he gets without even the tiniest air bubble. I've made myself a checklist of all the little things to remember during the injection procedure, it is, however, still much like meeting Freddy Krueger in the boiler room at midnight on Halloween, every morning. Unarmed, without a flashlight and your hands tied. I am in frequent contact with the vet, our next blood glucose re-check appointment is Tuesday and I'll probably leave her a message regarding Furby's status later this morning. I also have a handicapped cat (Minnie, Furby's half-sister, in fact), who has had bladder stones and gets frequent UT infections, so....Vets R Us........
Weekends are particularly stressful, since the so-called emergency clinic is a chamber of horrors rip-off palace where they take your pet from you, disappear behind closed doors, only to re-emerge an hour later with dire news that nothing can be done, that'll be $ 2,000, please, would you like the body cremated? There used to be more of them and better ones, but now there's only 1. Must have something to do with the economic 'recovery' I keep hearing about.
I'll ask my vet about that Fancy Feast Classics wet food recommended here, but since even the probiotics capsules Minnie gets on her food contain some type of glucosaccharides (which Furby isn't supposed to even smell), I want to get her ok before braving Walmart on a Saturday.
Thanks for reading!
Weekends are particularly stressful, since the so-called emergency clinic is a chamber of horrors rip-off palace where they take your pet from you, disappear behind closed doors, only to re-emerge an hour later with dire news that nothing can be done, that'll be $ 2,000, please, would you like the body cremated? There used to be more of them and better ones, but now there's only 1. Must have something to do with the economic 'recovery' I keep hearing about.
I'll ask my vet about that Fancy Feast Classics wet food recommended here, but since even the probiotics capsules Minnie gets on her food contain some type of glucosaccharides (which Furby isn't supposed to even smell), I want to get her ok before braving Walmart on a Saturday.
Thanks for reading!