Deborah Fitch Christner
Member Since 2016
Hi, I hardly know where to start. My name is Deborah and my husband's name is Henry. We have six cats, all rescues or foster failures, and two cocker spaniels. I found Percy at age 3 mos. on a lonely swamp road in eastern NC, brought him home. That was 10 years ago. I sort of blame myself for his diabetes. I started fostering cats about 18 mos. ago. Our first foster was a late-neutered, large male cat who started territory wars w/one of our other neutered males. Silas was terrified of the foster. Vet recommended putting Silas on Royal Canin Calm to help him cope with the intruder. Problem with Royal Canin Calm besides the cost is that it is delicious. Everyone loved it, particularly Percy (NOT afraid of the foster), who found it wherever I hid it and ballooned up to 22 lbs. Big cat to begin with; looks pretty fit at 14 or 15 lbs. That's why I blame myself: if he had not gotten so fat, would he have gotten diabetes? Would he have gotten so fat if I hadn't started fostering a cat who scared Silas, hence the yummy, fattening Calm? Anyway, Percy was dx'd last month when we took him to the vet for a Brown Recluse spider bite on his back paw--a horrible, horrible-looking wound. Percy ended up having to lose three of the four toes on that foot, and our vet said the diabetes probably affected how quickly his tissues became necrotic. He is on 8 units of Vetsulin 2x/day; he started on 6 units 2x/day, but his glucose levels were still anywhere from 450 to over 600. So our vet upped his dose and now his thirst has moderated as has his urine output. Vet said he will put him on a diet in a couple weeks after we make sure he is good at this dose. Percy is a strong, loving, purring, calm cat. He does seem better--livelier, more interested in what's going on, calmer, less grumpy. I am really worried about one thing right now: his skin. He loses hair in large patches that expand from the center out. It appears the top layer of his skin peels back from the center of a lesion, taking the hair w/it. Newly exposed skin looks inflamed. At the center of a widening lesion, the skin becomes very dark and sort of rough. Vet said apply Neosporin if I feel I have to do something (he wasn't at all obnoxious about saying that.), and that's how I do feel. Can't find an image that looks like Percy's lesions. God, they're awful (the images). So hello. I'm very glad I found Feline Diabetes online.