November - Saoirse's Progress

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Critter Mom

Member Since 2014
*** LONG POST ALERT ***

Hi all,

Saoirse' s doing quite well, I'm pleased to report. I haven't been posting updates because not much is changing with her, but after reading some of Mel's comments in another thread I thought it might be helpful to others to share some of the reasoning behind how I've chosen to manage her diabetes treatment at the moment and the results of my treatment choices.

Firstly, as some of you already know I have PTSD which means I have major problems with fatigue. I also have problems with paralysing fear because the condition tends to leave a person in a state of constant dread that something awful is about to happen. Both of my issues have presented challenges in treating Saoirse's diabetes. Because of the intense fear, I can't even attempt to sleep until I know that she is in safe numbers. This has made my fatigue worse. Because of the fatigue, sometimes I have passed out with exhaustion and not set out her timed feeds. The long fasting periods have caused significant spikes in Saoirse's blood glucose levels (and made me feel like a complete fink for letting my girl down. :oops: )The fatigue was getting so bad that I was starting to pass out during the day as well and I was becoming increasingly frightened of giving Saoirse insulin at all because I could not guarantee staying awake to monitor her.

Although Saoirse's numbers are very good, I am not going to attempt an OTJ trial for the time being for the following reasons (not in any particular order):

1. My goal for Saoirse's treatment is a solid remission, not a rush to get off insulin. Saoirse recently had a major pancreatitis flare-up. Her symptoms have improved immensely but she still gets off days. I want to give her pancreas some insulin support for a little longer (she still needs anti-nausea meds).

2. On the first OTJ trial, Saoirse's numbers started drifting upwards and could very easily have gone outside the euglycaemic range. Her clinical signs showed deterioration after only a couple of days (coat condition was first to go). When Saoirse's numbers were bobbing along at the top of the euglycaemic range, her appetite was very sluggish and she needed regular administration of an appetite stimulant in order to eat (cyproheptadine). My gut feeling was that it was too soon to withdraw insulin support. Most important of all, Saoirse is W-A-Y happier and her clinical signs are very significantly better when her BG is in the lower part of the euglycaemic range. I want to give her body more time to get used to lower numbers and hopefully establish a lower glucose homeostasis set point.

3. My feeding screw-ups were somewhat serendipitous. Home testing revealed that Saoirse's blood sugar spikes badly if she fasts for more than a couple of hours and this has been valuable from a diagnostic perspective. I have been researching this, and as best as I can make out from what I've read, this phenomenon may be due to residual insulin resistance in her liver. Because her liver is not detecting the insulin properly, instead of just topping up her blood glucose between meals when levels get lower, it doesn't know when to switch off glucose production and dumps a shed load of it into her bloodstream. It pushed her levels above the top end of the TR target range AND the euglycaemic range. I hoped that by continuing with insulin her liver's insulin sensitivity might improve.

4. We will shortly be moving to a new house. This will be very stressful for Saoirse (and her bean) and I don't want to risk a setback in her recovery due to the upheaval.

With very tightly controlled feeding and because she is an indoor-only cat, Saoirse's regulation is good and through testing I've learned that she has a tendency to run lower at night. I can monitor her OK during the daytime. Therefore, the solution I have arrived at that works for us is SID dosing of a small amount of Lantus. I eased up the dose from zero in tiny increments until I got to an amount where she doesn't go too low during the daytime when the insulin is active in her system but where there is enough carryover to work with her own metabolism to keep her numbers satisfactory during the night.

So far, Saoirse's 7-day average BG is slowly but steadily trending downwards. She stays in very good numbers most of the day (mid to lower part of TR target range) with the exception of fasting-related hepatic glucose dumps. The size of the BG spikes from glucose dumps are starting to reduce. Saoirse's appetite is better at the lower numbers - she's learning how to be hungry properly again and hasn't had an appetite stimulant for weeks. (Still needs a little nudge from her person to eat now and again, but a big improvement). Saoirse's need for anti-nausea meds is reducing gradually (I think the insulin itself upsets her tummy a little). Saoirse's house-moving, stressed-out bean's increased anxiety problems are negatively affecting her mood somewhat, but not her BG levels. Saoirse's other clinical signs are good and there are additional subtle improvements (like the way she lies when she's relaxing). Coat and body condition are very good. Best of all, my darling girl purrs much more these days! cat_pet_icon

Given that Saoirse's numbers made it possible, switching to SID saved my health from deteriorating further and has helped me to safely reintroduce Saoirse's system to numbers in the lower part of the TR target range. My plan is to get the house move over, then follow the TR guideline for dose reduction/tapering off insulin based on the criterion of ALL of Saoirse's test numbers being in the TR range for 7 days in a row. I am also investigating options for supplements to improve Saoirse's liver function and insulin sensitivity. Any suggestions?

The above does not constitute a recommendation for treatment. It's just an example of how every cat and every caregiver is different and how I found a way to overcome our particular challenges. I am so grateful to all who contribute to FDMB because I have learned so much here. In particular, my heartfelt thanks go to Mel for helping me to gain the confidence to use the data I have gathered and the knowledge I have acquired in order to adapt the SLGS and TR protocols to develop a treatment method that is specific to our needs.
 
Thanks for posting this. I'm glad to see Saoirse is enjoying both good numbers and good clinical signs. BTW, your spreadsheet for her is truly something to behold.
 
Hi April,

Thank you for the feedback! If you think my Google spreadsheet is busy, you'd want to see the one I keep locally (I'm a detail junky ... :roll: ). With the local one in Excel, I can annotate the readings with feeding info and also I keep track of how long Saoirse fasts before the glucose dumps to try and spot things that I might adjust to try to resolve that problem.

The additional stuff in the spreadsheet was added out of necessity. With PTSD, one's concentration and focus tend to be severely impaired and that makes it very difficult to assimilate all but the smallest tidbits of information. For example, if I were to try to read a page on Wikipedia, the text would just start to swim on the screen, my brain would go into overload and I'd end up having to walk away from the computer. I had a similar reaction to seeing screenloads of test data and I found it impossible to spot any trends. By getting the spreadsheet to calculate the averages and track the maximum BG trends, it does all the work for me. It tells me if Saoirse is trending up or down at a glance. It has also helped on an emotional level, especially on days when some of her readings are higher. The higher readings always make my spirit sink, but when I see that the day average is OK it gives me much-needed comfort and reassurance that she's getting better. It has also helped me to very quickly spot things that weren't working.
 
Just wanted to add that I'd welcome feedback on what other members think of the approach that I've adopted and whether there are any potential pitfalls that I haven't thought of.
 
The idea of tracking daily and weekly bg averages is really smart. I added that into Maddy's sheet, and I'll let you know if it helps me.
 
hi Áine
i loved reading your update on Saoirse.
and yes your spreadsheet is awesome.
hugs
 
You may or may not find this helpful. There is a practice effect, I.e. you get better at it the more you practice. Its a tool. It won't fix why your body is tense or stressed, but it may help you recover after an intense period. Done before bed, it will help you rest, even if you don't fall asleep.

Relaxation Breathing​
- based on the information in "The Relaxation Response" by Herbert Benson, MD.

Begin by sitting in a comfortable chair with good back support, or lying down. The key thing is to have your body pretty much straight between hips and shoulders so your lungs have room.

Now, breathe out completely. That way there will be room for a full breath in. If you start with half filled lungs, taking a deep breath in won't feel very large.

Pause.

Slowly, take a deep breath.

Pause.

Slowly, exhale.

Repeat, and establish a pattern of slow, deep breathing. Give yourself a good 20 minutes (turn off the phone, close the door) to get into this process. If done at bedtime, you may drift into sleep.

By slowing and deepening your breathing, you often cause the heart rate to slow and relax, muscle tightness to ease away, and blood pressure to decrease.
 
April, I hope the averages help you. It would be great to get feedback about whether you find them useful.

Nadine, I'm glad you enjoyed hearing about how Saoirse's doing. Now that I've got the background posted it'll be easier to post short updates to let you all know how we're getting on.

BJ, thank you for the breathing exercise! WIth the PTSD I have found that my breathing is very shallow as a rule. I'm going to start doing it this evening (assuming I don't pass out in the meantime ... :oops: :roll: ). I really don't want to go back on Ambien to regulate my sleep. It makes my dreams worse and my whole system feels like carp when I take it.

:YMHUG: to all.
 
Aine,

Thanks for the reminder about averages. :YMHUG: See I do forget to mention stuff that I've gotten in the habit of checking and they are now just routine. :-D

Yes folks your meters have a 7 day and either a 14 day or 30 day average on them for a reason. I really need to add that column to Autumn's spreadsheet as well. Not only do you want to watch your spreadsheets across for the daily patterns, but also down to see waves of action and your averages to see how those are trending. Another thing that is often helpful for me, it to shrink my spreadsheet so I'm not seeing numbers but just colors and look for the waves of action that way, also another reason that I recoded how Autumn's displays colors. As well as taking the clock out of a week's worth of data and plotting it on a line graph. Both have really helped me in the past see past the individual cycles and see the waves of action. Cats don't tell time..lol

My general rule of thumb with my cats is that as long as the average is trending down and I'm getting fairly decent numbers that are also trending down I leave the dose alone and let them continue to settle, once that average stabilizes (there will always be some flux) then I look at if I need to raise the dose depending on what I am seeing for nadirs. This is where I kind of hybrid the two protocols, I let the dose sit according to SLGS but base my decisions to raise on TR.

Mel and The Fur Gang
 
A couple of methods for averages:

Sum the highest number and the lowest number in a shot cycle, then divide by 2. All things being equal, a little more than half the time was above that; a little less than half the time was below that.

Add together all the tests, then divide by the number of tests. This will be biased upward if you took more tests during the higher portions and biased lower if you took more tests during the lower/nadir period.

If you do a curve of every 2 hours or every 3 hours, it will be closer to an average ... except that it isn't a straight line drop then increase, it is somewhat like a parabola with a bit of a lip on the left side from the food spike. If you actually graph the tests you take, you can fit a curve through the points most times.
 
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