Tas' Mum said:
I really don't know why he became diabetic again. We have ZERO handouts at the table and no treats except catnip.
Treats are ok just as long as they are low carb :smile: Here's a list of popular low carb treats:
http://felinediabetes.com/FDMB/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=9172 Plain boiled or steamed chicken is great if your cat likes that.
The ONLY thing he gets fed is the Purina DM canned food....though I did recently switch him to their new formula which has more gravy and is flaky. He had stopped eating the regular kind so I was excited when this new formula came out as he LOVES it. You don't think that could have done it do you? That's really been the only change.
I think it could be. Generally anything in gravy means high carbs because of the starches used to thicken up the gravy.
Here are the ingredients for the canned DM in gravy:
Water sufficient for processing, chicken, liver, wheat gluten, meat by-products, corn starch-modified, soy flour, artificial and natural flavors, calcium phosphate, potassium chloride, taurine, choline chloride, salt, L-Lysine monohydrochloride, added color, zinc sulfate, calcium pantothenate, Vitamin A supplement, menadione sodium bisulfite complex (source of Vitamin K activity), pyridoxine hydrochhloride, riboflavin supplement, Vitamin B-12 supplement, biotin, folic acid, Vitamin D-3 supplement, potassium iodide.
Corn starch and soy flour are hidden sources of carbs. Wheat gluten is an allergen to some cats. Overall the food is really poor quality to feed a cat, IMO. Not to mention expensive. :-Q
Have you ever fed your cat a commerical brand of canned food? Nearly everyone here feed a commercial canned food brand to their diabetic cats. Brands such as Fancy Feast, Friskies, Wellness, and Merrick are good choices. Are you familar with the food charts? Dr. Lisa (of Catinfo.org, great place to learn about proper cat nutrition) posted an updated food chart here:
http://felinediabetes.com/FDMB/viewtopic.php?f=28&t=79683 On her chart, stick with foods that have a number 10or less in the carb column. DM is on her chart near the bottom. Regular DM is 3% carbs and the gravy DM is 10% carbs, not bad really carb-wise but you can buy
much better quality foods for a lot less and your cat would like them even more :smile: A lot of cats get bored with eating DM.
Other charts and lists you can use but may have slightly outdated info are:
Binky's canned food charts
Pet Food Nutritional Values list
Hobo's Guide To Nutritional Values
Dr. Lynne's Wet Food list
List of low carb gluten free Fancy Feast
On Binky's charts, stick with foods that have a number 10 or less in the carbs colum. On the Pet Food Nutritional Values Chart and Hobo's Guide, look at the %kcal from carbs column and choose foods that have a number 10 or less.
And insulin was SO much cheaper the last time he needed it. So confused why it is now three times as much. the pharmacist I talked to was surprised too.
Everything has gotten expensive in the last couple of years :roll:
I'm going to read about the pens - had heard about them but the vet did not mention them so I didn't look into it.
Many vets don't know about the SoloStar pens. For cats, you use the SoloStar pen the same way as a bottle: stick the insulin syringe needle into the rubber stopper. By using insulin sringes, you can measure half unit and even quarter units doses. The pen only doses in whole units which is fine for a Human diabetic but so so much for cats. One of the stickies on the Lantus board has info on how to use a pen with an insulin syringe.