Hello -
I'm Nancy and my cat Anabel (about 10 years old) was diagnosed with diabetes in the fall of 2008. After the usual "learning" period, we finally got her "regulated" on Lantus at 3 units 2x/day.
(please excuse me if I do not get all these medical terms right, I am still learning!).
So basically she was fine for a year until October 2009. She was on the Royal Canin dry diabetic food 2x/day and seemed fine. We did home testing to get the insulin levels set up, and once she seemed "stable" she was fine so we didn't do a lot of testing (which our vet said was ok). When we did test, however, her bg were really never that low - maybe 200-250.
Anyways, to make a long story short, she went through a hypoglycemic episode this October. Then she became very picky about her food. So we (on the vet's advice) were feeding her anything she wanted to get her to eat. At the same time he was ajusting her insulin dose. Her bg levels were usually between 150 and 400 (which we sent to our vet every few days).
She was also diagnosed with a thyroid problem before Christmas and put on the thyroid ear cream for that. She was down to 1.5 units 2x/day and seemed to be eating okay, then just stopped eating. She went into the emergency vet with DKA on 1/10 after she missed two meals and was "out of it." She spent four days at the emergency vet, where they got everything all straightened out with fluids, short-acting insulin, etc. They did not find any underlying cause of why this would happen and it seems they ran the gamut of tests, including ultrasounds. She did not receive her thyroid medicine while in the er.
So she came home the night of 1/13 and ate decently (a lot, actually) until the night of 1/19, when she had a little dinner. Had no interest in food the morning of 1/20 so took her to the internal med vet (located as part of the er) on the advice of my regular vet (who pretty much is stumped). He basically said she had ketones but her bg was okay (300ish), and that we should take her home and get her to eat (He did give her subcutaneous fluids, which perked her up a little bit). That didn't work (we have tried to force feed in past episodes and it didn't help) and she was worse by the time we got home from work.
So she's back at the er dept for another stint last night at getting her out of the DKA again. This time they found a little bit of respiratory infection (in her nose; hadn't reached her lungs yet) and one liver enzyme was slightly elevated. So she is also on antibiotics this time around. Other than that, they did not find anything again. She was still not eating this morning but it look her 1.5 days last week there to start eating. She'll be there until she starts eating decently (they said).
My main questions are: is this common? Do we have any hope here? Honestly, we can't just keep taking her to the er every week if/when she stops eating & looks thoroughly miserable. She's stressed, my husband and I are stressed, and our credit card is becoming stressed very quickly. Does anyone have any suggestions? Can we try to reverse this at home? I've asked about the effects of the thyroid and/or switching to a different insulin, and the vets just look at me like I am nuts.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Everyone is stressed!
Thanks,
Nancy
I'm Nancy and my cat Anabel (about 10 years old) was diagnosed with diabetes in the fall of 2008. After the usual "learning" period, we finally got her "regulated" on Lantus at 3 units 2x/day.
(please excuse me if I do not get all these medical terms right, I am still learning!).
So basically she was fine for a year until October 2009. She was on the Royal Canin dry diabetic food 2x/day and seemed fine. We did home testing to get the insulin levels set up, and once she seemed "stable" she was fine so we didn't do a lot of testing (which our vet said was ok). When we did test, however, her bg were really never that low - maybe 200-250.
Anyways, to make a long story short, she went through a hypoglycemic episode this October. Then she became very picky about her food. So we (on the vet's advice) were feeding her anything she wanted to get her to eat. At the same time he was ajusting her insulin dose. Her bg levels were usually between 150 and 400 (which we sent to our vet every few days).
She was also diagnosed with a thyroid problem before Christmas and put on the thyroid ear cream for that. She was down to 1.5 units 2x/day and seemed to be eating okay, then just stopped eating. She went into the emergency vet with DKA on 1/10 after she missed two meals and was "out of it." She spent four days at the emergency vet, where they got everything all straightened out with fluids, short-acting insulin, etc. They did not find any underlying cause of why this would happen and it seems they ran the gamut of tests, including ultrasounds. She did not receive her thyroid medicine while in the er.
So she came home the night of 1/13 and ate decently (a lot, actually) until the night of 1/19, when she had a little dinner. Had no interest in food the morning of 1/20 so took her to the internal med vet (located as part of the er) on the advice of my regular vet (who pretty much is stumped). He basically said she had ketones but her bg was okay (300ish), and that we should take her home and get her to eat (He did give her subcutaneous fluids, which perked her up a little bit). That didn't work (we have tried to force feed in past episodes and it didn't help) and she was worse by the time we got home from work.
So she's back at the er dept for another stint last night at getting her out of the DKA again. This time they found a little bit of respiratory infection (in her nose; hadn't reached her lungs yet) and one liver enzyme was slightly elevated. So she is also on antibiotics this time around. Other than that, they did not find anything again. She was still not eating this morning but it look her 1.5 days last week there to start eating. She'll be there until she starts eating decently (they said).
My main questions are: is this common? Do we have any hope here? Honestly, we can't just keep taking her to the er every week if/when she stops eating & looks thoroughly miserable. She's stressed, my husband and I are stressed, and our credit card is becoming stressed very quickly. Does anyone have any suggestions? Can we try to reverse this at home? I've asked about the effects of the thyroid and/or switching to a different insulin, and the vets just look at me like I am nuts.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Everyone is stressed!
Thanks,
Nancy