phlika29
Member Since 2014
Hi everyone
Quick recap
Remi has been in diabetic remission since Xmas eve. He also has IBD and asthma and the two things got really bad by March having stopped steroids following his diabetic diagnosis. So after a major asthma attack for the last month he has been on 1.25 mg prednicare eod and has been doing much better.
The combination of the new novel protein food and 1.25 mg steroid has helped to get his IBD under control. He is happy, his fur is good, his poo is solid and he is interested in going outside. No burping, no tummy gurgling and so his asthma is much better. He is even jumping up on everything again and seeking out any form of plastic that he can munch on.
So far so good. The only down side is that his blood glucose levels have slowly been trending g upwards and the last week or so he has become much more hungry again. Before he started back on the steroids his blood glucose (taken first thing in the morning or before his evening meals) was typically anywhere between 4.6 and 5.6. The most recent tests show that in the morning after I give 1.25 mg steroid dose is 6.4 and another was 6.2. Before that it was 5.7. Usually by the evening it had dropped back to about 5.6.
So my concern is that this post morning number has risen slightly even though the dose hasn't and that is getting closer to the diabetic number. What do you think about these options?
Eek out the dose do that I give 1.25 mg every third day or even every 2.5 days. Allowing the body to recover for longer.
Drop the dose to 0.75 mg (or 1 mg) eod but am not actually sure if that will make any difference in the long term.
Change over to the budensoide -sp?? Steroid.
What is the half life of the steroid? Will it make a difference to make it last longer? Is there a risk that Remi will become allergic to the new food if he hasn't got as much steroid in his system? He see,d to improve when he went on the new food but maybe that was just the steroid helping dampen down the response (he was still burping, diarrhoea, etc when on the steroid and the old chicken food).
I do fancy trying the other steroid that is meant to have a more local affect-what do you think? What is the blood glucose number I need to really be concerned about?
Any advice gratefully received.
Kind regards
Sarah
Quick recap
Remi has been in diabetic remission since Xmas eve. He also has IBD and asthma and the two things got really bad by March having stopped steroids following his diabetic diagnosis. So after a major asthma attack for the last month he has been on 1.25 mg prednicare eod and has been doing much better.
The combination of the new novel protein food and 1.25 mg steroid has helped to get his IBD under control. He is happy, his fur is good, his poo is solid and he is interested in going outside. No burping, no tummy gurgling and so his asthma is much better. He is even jumping up on everything again and seeking out any form of plastic that he can munch on.
So far so good. The only down side is that his blood glucose levels have slowly been trending g upwards and the last week or so he has become much more hungry again. Before he started back on the steroids his blood glucose (taken first thing in the morning or before his evening meals) was typically anywhere between 4.6 and 5.6. The most recent tests show that in the morning after I give 1.25 mg steroid dose is 6.4 and another was 6.2. Before that it was 5.7. Usually by the evening it had dropped back to about 5.6.
So my concern is that this post morning number has risen slightly even though the dose hasn't and that is getting closer to the diabetic number. What do you think about these options?
Eek out the dose do that I give 1.25 mg every third day or even every 2.5 days. Allowing the body to recover for longer.
Drop the dose to 0.75 mg (or 1 mg) eod but am not actually sure if that will make any difference in the long term.
Change over to the budensoide -sp?? Steroid.
What is the half life of the steroid? Will it make a difference to make it last longer? Is there a risk that Remi will become allergic to the new food if he hasn't got as much steroid in his system? He see,d to improve when he went on the new food but maybe that was just the steroid helping dampen down the response (he was still burping, diarrhoea, etc when on the steroid and the old chicken food).
I do fancy trying the other steroid that is meant to have a more local affect-what do you think? What is the blood glucose number I need to really be concerned about?
Any advice gratefully received.
Kind regards
Sarah