FluffBunny
Member Since 2014
I am new to the forum and I have been posting in the general forum. This morning, someone suggested that I move here.
Oliver was diagnosed with diabetes in April of this year. We are pretty sure it developed after he started on Prednisolone for IBD in January, so his diabetes is not long standing. The first month I changed to all canned food and lowered his pred. from 5 to 2.5 mg daily. It didn't make a difference. I started him on Lantus on 5/24 and my life has been a nightmare since then.
I have to add that I live in fear of hypoglycemia. I had a cat who had a diabetic seizure in November and it is not something I ever want to see again.
I have gone through 100 test strips since I started this and I have made two emergency trips to the vet when Oliver's BG fell too low. My vet has told me to stop testing and to give him the injection as long as he is eating. I just can't do that.
I started with 2U twice a day and now I am trying 1U. I actually thought things were beginning to stabilize a couple of days ago, then a new pattern developed.
Since I started the injections, I have been injecting in the flank per my vet's instructions. I even had him shaved in the appropriate spots so I could see what I am doing. Injection time has been traumatic for both of us. The only way I can give him the injection in the flank is to wrap him in a towel, put a pillow on top of him, then lean on the pillow to hold him still. Even with all this preparation, he manages to wiggle out of his confinement 4 or 5 times before I am able to give the shot. It has been a twice daily wrestling match. The other night I decided I couldn't so this anymore and I gave him the injection in the scruff of his neck where I have always given cat injections and fluids. It worked like a charm. He didn't even flinch.
Unfortunately, this seems to have changed his curve. He was reaching his nadir 6 - 7 hours after injection. The last two days, his AMPS was so low, I was afraid to give him his morning shot. I just read on this forum that giving the insulin in the scruff slows absorption which is probably why I am seeing this change in his curve.
I just don't know what to do next. My fear of hypoglycemia is almost neurotic. I have been following the general rule of skipping the injection if his pre-injection reading is below 200. But, if giving the shot in the scruff of the neck slows absorption, then his pre-injection reading will probably always be low. I don't know if I will have the courage to inject him with a low AMPS.
Can someone hold my hand?
Oliver was diagnosed with diabetes in April of this year. We are pretty sure it developed after he started on Prednisolone for IBD in January, so his diabetes is not long standing. The first month I changed to all canned food and lowered his pred. from 5 to 2.5 mg daily. It didn't make a difference. I started him on Lantus on 5/24 and my life has been a nightmare since then.
I have to add that I live in fear of hypoglycemia. I had a cat who had a diabetic seizure in November and it is not something I ever want to see again.
I have gone through 100 test strips since I started this and I have made two emergency trips to the vet when Oliver's BG fell too low. My vet has told me to stop testing and to give him the injection as long as he is eating. I just can't do that.
I started with 2U twice a day and now I am trying 1U. I actually thought things were beginning to stabilize a couple of days ago, then a new pattern developed.
Since I started the injections, I have been injecting in the flank per my vet's instructions. I even had him shaved in the appropriate spots so I could see what I am doing. Injection time has been traumatic for both of us. The only way I can give him the injection in the flank is to wrap him in a towel, put a pillow on top of him, then lean on the pillow to hold him still. Even with all this preparation, he manages to wiggle out of his confinement 4 or 5 times before I am able to give the shot. It has been a twice daily wrestling match. The other night I decided I couldn't so this anymore and I gave him the injection in the scruff of his neck where I have always given cat injections and fluids. It worked like a charm. He didn't even flinch.
Unfortunately, this seems to have changed his curve. He was reaching his nadir 6 - 7 hours after injection. The last two days, his AMPS was so low, I was afraid to give him his morning shot. I just read on this forum that giving the insulin in the scruff slows absorption which is probably why I am seeing this change in his curve.
I just don't know what to do next. My fear of hypoglycemia is almost neurotic. I have been following the general rule of skipping the injection if his pre-injection reading is below 200. But, if giving the shot in the scruff of the neck slows absorption, then his pre-injection reading will probably always be low. I don't know if I will have the courage to inject him with a low AMPS.
Can someone hold my hand?