sylvie1313
Member Since 2011
Hi,
I have been reading on this site and others for about a week now and I am still at a loss for what to do. I dropped my cat off at Petsmart 7am for a dental last week and got a call mid-afternoon that he was diabetic. During his pre-screen, his blood glucose was 300. The vet insisted upon immediately getting him in for a glucose curve and starting insulin. My head was spinning and I wanted some time to do some research. I just felt that one reading wasn't enough for such a huge diagnosis. I was thinking things like maybe that catnip he ate this morning caused it, or maybe he ate a weird bug. I bought the Precision Xtra meter, some urine strips, and started changing his diet first to Fancy Feast, and since the meat grinder just arrived, he'll be on a raw food diet. Even if he's not sick, it's just better for him. The meter read at 62 and 68 at different times. Those were the only two readings I got before I ran out of the 10 strips. I wasted 2 on myself because I'd rather learn how to use it on myself before terrorizing my poor cat. Getting enough blood was more of a problem than I though too. I called the vet and was COMPLETELY dismissed because I'd used a human meter and "we had this discussion". He had told me NOT to use a human meter, but after reading on here and other sites, I did and still do feel he is wrong. He's been fed that nonsense from Abbott about the meters being statistically different. By the way, I'm a medical researcher and that study was bogus. Why didn't they test against their own Freestyle or Precision? Hmmmm? Maybe because then they couldn't justify selling the Alpha Trak at 4 times the price? Anyway, my vet will not accept my home readings. AND he's too busy to see me again before I go on vacation. I'm leaving my cat with a friend and I need to know if the cat needs insulin! I went into another Petsmart today for an appointment for a glucose test and they knew I wanted it as quick as possible to minimize the stress effect. It was 150. I'm thinking it's stress from the visits that causes it to spike. The vet didn't agree and still thinks it's probably diabetes. She also said the human meter was not accurate or "why would they have made a pet meter?". Great logic. I reminded her that a lot of vets have always used a human meter and still do and she had to agree. Still, this is my baby and I can't be wrong. The test strips are taking forever to get here, they were due in the mail today, but maybe tomorrow, so I can get more readings. Does anyone have any feedback for me? If I get 20 readings in the normal range at home, can I be confident that my cat is not diabetic, or is the vet right and the home testing is pointless? I turn it over now to all of you feline diabetes experts. I have already learned a lot from you and hope you can help me further.
I have been reading on this site and others for about a week now and I am still at a loss for what to do. I dropped my cat off at Petsmart 7am for a dental last week and got a call mid-afternoon that he was diabetic. During his pre-screen, his blood glucose was 300. The vet insisted upon immediately getting him in for a glucose curve and starting insulin. My head was spinning and I wanted some time to do some research. I just felt that one reading wasn't enough for such a huge diagnosis. I was thinking things like maybe that catnip he ate this morning caused it, or maybe he ate a weird bug. I bought the Precision Xtra meter, some urine strips, and started changing his diet first to Fancy Feast, and since the meat grinder just arrived, he'll be on a raw food diet. Even if he's not sick, it's just better for him. The meter read at 62 and 68 at different times. Those were the only two readings I got before I ran out of the 10 strips. I wasted 2 on myself because I'd rather learn how to use it on myself before terrorizing my poor cat. Getting enough blood was more of a problem than I though too. I called the vet and was COMPLETELY dismissed because I'd used a human meter and "we had this discussion". He had told me NOT to use a human meter, but after reading on here and other sites, I did and still do feel he is wrong. He's been fed that nonsense from Abbott about the meters being statistically different. By the way, I'm a medical researcher and that study was bogus. Why didn't they test against their own Freestyle or Precision? Hmmmm? Maybe because then they couldn't justify selling the Alpha Trak at 4 times the price? Anyway, my vet will not accept my home readings. AND he's too busy to see me again before I go on vacation. I'm leaving my cat with a friend and I need to know if the cat needs insulin! I went into another Petsmart today for an appointment for a glucose test and they knew I wanted it as quick as possible to minimize the stress effect. It was 150. I'm thinking it's stress from the visits that causes it to spike. The vet didn't agree and still thinks it's probably diabetes. She also said the human meter was not accurate or "why would they have made a pet meter?". Great logic. I reminded her that a lot of vets have always used a human meter and still do and she had to agree. Still, this is my baby and I can't be wrong. The test strips are taking forever to get here, they were due in the mail today, but maybe tomorrow, so I can get more readings. Does anyone have any feedback for me? If I get 20 readings in the normal range at home, can I be confident that my cat is not diabetic, or is the vet right and the home testing is pointless? I turn it over now to all of you feline diabetes experts. I have already learned a lot from you and hope you can help me further.