Anne&Muffin said:Hi there!
Are you using an alpha trak meter or a human one? What was the vet's reading that made him/her diagnose feline diabetes? Oftentimes the vet gets higher readings because kitty is stressed there, which will raise the BG. Imho, and I am not an expert, but those don't look like diabetic numbers to me, especially if you are just starting insulin.
I'm sure someone more experienced will weigh in soon, tho.
Amanda said:I haven't seen your other posts - why is your kitty not on a low carb, wet food? I wonder if you switched over if your cat's BG would dip down into a lower normal range on its own.
Kory & Smokey said:My cat had a very serious upper respiratory disease. He was having a hard time breathing and did not eat for a couple days. He was in bad shape and had a BG reading of 580 at the vet.
Sienne and Gabby said:Kory & Smokey said:My cat had a very serious upper respiratory disease. He was having a hard time breathing and did not eat for a couple days. He was in bad shape and had a BG reading of 580 at the vet.
I was trying to find info in your various threads about whether Smokey was sick around the time of diagnosis. Any illness -- infection or inflammation -- can effect BG levels. Illness stresses the system and in response, the body will respond with the release of corticosteroids. Steroids raise BG levels. Between the respiratory infection and vet stress, it sounds like Kory's BG went through the roof. In all likelihood, if Smokey was on a non-prescription diet, levels would have come back into a normal range more quickly. What you are probably seeing now is Smokey's numbers coming back down to what they would normally be.
By any chance, do you have any lab results at home from before the respiratory infection? I wonder what Smokey's BG levels were previously?
FWIW, a friend of mine's cat was diagnosed with a UTI and his BG levels skyrocketed. He was started on insulin and within a month was OTJ.
(BTW: a bit of housekeeping. We open one condo or thread, per cat, per day.)
Ann & Tess said:Hi again, here is the lik to your [urlhttp://www.felinediabetes.com/FDMB/viewtopic.php?f=9&t=55510]earlier post today[/url]. We try to keep it all together for continuity every day. Then we start a new one the next day.
You said he is on Hills CD, dry or wet? Dry food are often the cause of crystals and the "standard" prescription diets do little to really help. Please read Dr Pierson's page on Urinary Tract Health Dr. Elizabeth Hodgkin's book "Your Cat" has a lot of excellent information too.
Sandy and Black Kitty said:It's looking that way to my eyes. . .
Any luck finding a lower carb food appropriate for the crystals situation?