Hi all -
I have an 8 yr old male cat with diabetes. I am currently in the process of getting him regular on the insulin doses and he is now at 2 units, twice a day.
Last night when giving him his nightly dose I messed up with the injection and injected it into the tissue/skin (back of neck) and there was a bubble afterwards. This morning before his insulin I figured I would take his blood sugar before injecting him because of the incident yesterday. He was at 120. Normally in the morning at that time he is 350-400. I am wondering what happened, did the bubble create a "slow release" effect or did it just take a while to circulate? Anyhow, since he was so low, or normal I guess, I skipped his dosage. I didn't want to give him too much and have his sugar drop.
Any ideas or theories on why it would have been so low?
Any help is appreciated,
Dan
I have an 8 yr old male cat with diabetes. I am currently in the process of getting him regular on the insulin doses and he is now at 2 units, twice a day.
Last night when giving him his nightly dose I messed up with the injection and injected it into the tissue/skin (back of neck) and there was a bubble afterwards. This morning before his insulin I figured I would take his blood sugar before injecting him because of the incident yesterday. He was at 120. Normally in the morning at that time he is 350-400. I am wondering what happened, did the bubble create a "slow release" effect or did it just take a while to circulate? Anyhow, since he was so low, or normal I guess, I skipped his dosage. I didn't want to give him too much and have his sugar drop.
Any ideas or theories on why it would have been so low?
Any help is appreciated,
Dan