I'm sorry I've been away and not posting - the last few weeks have been a stress test to beat the band.
My vet's been doing Fructosamine testing on Romeo to see where his blood sugar averages have been. I haven't been able yet to do a successful home test on him. He really hates them, though part of it is probably because I'm so apprehensive in doing them. He tested in the "out of control" level the first time, and after 2 weeks of insulin, actually tested higher. I'm about to cry.
The vet increased him 2 weeks ago to 2 units of Lantus twice a day. He gets his PureBites treats (gotta love the doggie isle - treats are bigger and cheaper than the cat treats for the same damned thing). They also recommended FortiFlora, as he was having a problem with loose stool. The vet also suggested adding AbsorbAid to his food, too, to help with metabolizing and digesting. The nice pharmacist at Target did confirm, though, if you keep the Lantus in the fridge it will last for up to a year. Just got to watch for it to go cloudy - once that happens, get a new bottle.
Since he's still squatting to urinate, his back paws are covered in litter
which he won't let me at
I'm switching over to a pine solution for the litter, which doesn't seem to stick to him. We did have a problem with him having some accidents - probably because he was tired and couldn't get to the litter box. But I added a third litter box and we haven't had anymore accidents. He seems to be the only one using this new box, though, so I might be able to do a urine test for sugar, right?
I managed to find B12 vitamins at Whole Foods, but wasn't sure on the dosage.
Overall, I'm still a wreck. Watching him try to walk kills me. And the fact that even after increasing his dosage his fructosamine levels are still so high makes me wonder if I'm actually doing anything good for him. We will be setting up another appointment in 2 weeks for a recheck and a retest of the blood levels, since I can't do it at home.
Any suggestions on how might be the best way to switch over from dry food w/wet at night to a wet food diet? I just don't want his poor body to have more stress than it needs.
-Stacy
My vet's been doing Fructosamine testing on Romeo to see where his blood sugar averages have been. I haven't been able yet to do a successful home test on him. He really hates them, though part of it is probably because I'm so apprehensive in doing them. He tested in the "out of control" level the first time, and after 2 weeks of insulin, actually tested higher. I'm about to cry.
The vet increased him 2 weeks ago to 2 units of Lantus twice a day. He gets his PureBites treats (gotta love the doggie isle - treats are bigger and cheaper than the cat treats for the same damned thing). They also recommended FortiFlora, as he was having a problem with loose stool. The vet also suggested adding AbsorbAid to his food, too, to help with metabolizing and digesting. The nice pharmacist at Target did confirm, though, if you keep the Lantus in the fridge it will last for up to a year. Just got to watch for it to go cloudy - once that happens, get a new bottle.
Since he's still squatting to urinate, his back paws are covered in litter




I managed to find B12 vitamins at Whole Foods, but wasn't sure on the dosage.
Overall, I'm still a wreck. Watching him try to walk kills me. And the fact that even after increasing his dosage his fructosamine levels are still so high makes me wonder if I'm actually doing anything good for him. We will be setting up another appointment in 2 weeks for a recheck and a retest of the blood levels, since I can't do it at home.
Any suggestions on how might be the best way to switch over from dry food w/wet at night to a wet food diet? I just don't want his poor body to have more stress than it needs.
-Stacy