FurballLover
Active Member
First thing--have to give my big C praise for being such a trooper!! Most of the time he purred during testing, and his idea of a treat is that I 'hand' feed him extra cold h20 from the faucet when we're done! (its low carb and free :lol: ) So relieved he isn't resenting this new inconvenience (and interruptions of nap time)!
Charlie hasn't gotten an injection since thurs pm. His numbers have been great!
For anyone who didn't read my earlier threads, Charlie had an extremely serious hypo two saturdays ago that sent us to the vet. At the time we were giving 3u bid of an insulin that was supposed to be pzi. (long story about the insulin-we will change to a new one) As a result, I started hometesting thurs night.
His numbers are in the perfect no-shoot range.
I have a theory, tell me if it makes sense:
I think we missed his correct dose without hometesting.
Feeding kibble d/m kept him from being hypo (he was eating at least 1/2c per day).
When we reduced his kibble w/o reducing the insulin, he overloaded and had a hypo.
Switching his diet over to a LC all wet will reduce/eliminate his need for insulin.
I know we don't have a lot of numbers to look at yet, but today's curve made me think he might be in a h*n*ym**n!?
I'm sure his weight and diet precipitated the diabetes. Is it possible that addressing these issues in an otherwise healthy 8yr old will give us a few years before the disease pops up again? (if we are in fact in a h*neym**n)
The plan is:
Daily test amps and pmps, but I don't know what the 'magic' number is before I shoot again. I definitely won't start above .25 or .5
Check the +6/ +8 a few days (even if there's no injections)
Switch him over to a completely wet LC food (stocked up on a variety today)
I'm trying not to be overly optimistic, but the numbers we got today were fantastic!
I would love to hear thoughts from anyone on my 'theory'; and to know what the lowest number to safely shoot is.
One other little question: on our pm +2 test tonight, the first time I did it the number was 253, but I hadn't filled the strip with blood. Immediately did a 2nd test and it was 135. Was the first # wrong (only filled the strip 1/2)? I thought the meter wouldn't give a result if there wasn't enough blood. I'm a little confused and concerned on that one.
Charlie hasn't gotten an injection since thurs pm. His numbers have been great!
For anyone who didn't read my earlier threads, Charlie had an extremely serious hypo two saturdays ago that sent us to the vet. At the time we were giving 3u bid of an insulin that was supposed to be pzi. (long story about the insulin-we will change to a new one) As a result, I started hometesting thurs night.
His numbers are in the perfect no-shoot range.
I have a theory, tell me if it makes sense:
I think we missed his correct dose without hometesting.
Feeding kibble d/m kept him from being hypo (he was eating at least 1/2c per day).
When we reduced his kibble w/o reducing the insulin, he overloaded and had a hypo.
Switching his diet over to a LC all wet will reduce/eliminate his need for insulin.
I know we don't have a lot of numbers to look at yet, but today's curve made me think he might be in a h*n*ym**n!?
I'm sure his weight and diet precipitated the diabetes. Is it possible that addressing these issues in an otherwise healthy 8yr old will give us a few years before the disease pops up again? (if we are in fact in a h*neym**n)
The plan is:
Daily test amps and pmps, but I don't know what the 'magic' number is before I shoot again. I definitely won't start above .25 or .5
Check the +6/ +8 a few days (even if there's no injections)
Switch him over to a completely wet LC food (stocked up on a variety today)
I'm trying not to be overly optimistic, but the numbers we got today were fantastic!
I would love to hear thoughts from anyone on my 'theory'; and to know what the lowest number to safely shoot is.
One other little question: on our pm +2 test tonight, the first time I did it the number was 253, but I hadn't filled the strip with blood. Immediately did a 2nd test and it was 135. Was the first # wrong (only filled the strip 1/2)? I thought the meter wouldn't give a result if there wasn't enough blood. I'm a little confused and concerned on that one.