misty1477 said:
This may sound REALLY CRAZY.....but....I keep thinking about testing the rest of kittys to see how their BG levels are. ;-) Knowing my luck one or two or whatever will show up with FD levels or something. :roll:
Hi Misty, I'm Lu-Ann. My Grayson started out over here, but due to other conditions (Acromegaly & Insulin Resistance) we changed to another insulin. I have a "house full" of cats, and some are, ahem, what you might call "healthy"

as in OVER 20#. Grayson has an excuse, as Acro is also refered to as "Giant's Disease" - but not the rest. ANY time I see dandruff, a "looks like a teddy bear exploded" coat, any missed litter box, or just because they are a big guy or gal, I get my meter out and test them. They aren't NEARLY as cooperative as Grayson (after 15 months of testing!), but each one always consistently comes back in normal numbers. It does NOT hurt to be proactive and keep an eye on their sugar levels, so I encourage you to test them... and remember the treats!!!
I've glanced over your spreadsheet. While on ProZinc, my "do not shoot" number was 250. I also consistently saw a 30 point food spike with each can of chicken or turkey Fancy Feast. I could pretty much bet on him being consistent from that angle.
I've read through this thread, but not your previous posts, so you may have already gotten some of this advice already - or other PZI people may have other suggestions. It appears you're already mini-dosing - I assume with needles with half-unit markings. I only did mini-dosing for a brief while, then went up to the high doses that G needed after that just to move an inch. During that lo-dose time, however, I used the U100 needles and conversion chart for the small doses. That might be beneficial to you as well, given such responses to 1 unit. They enable you to make .2u incremental dosing.
The other thing that
might be good for Rumpelteazer would be a sliding scale.
Others may want to jump in here, as I did not use one, and perhaps you need to have a little more data under your belt before doing so. What it does is bases the dose on the preshot number. So, for instance, you may
not shoot anything under 250. 251-275 you might shoot 1/4u; 276-300 = 1/2u; 301-350 = 3/4u; and 351-up = 1 u. This is just an example, but it helps you see what a sliding scale can do.
You already know that you need to shoot a rising number. BJ already said, there are meter variances that often make a number that looks higher to be really pretty much the same. Not that you want to wait to hit reds before shooting, but that you can catch the number when it's clearly on the incline. I wasn't as confident in my early meter as I am in my current one.
One more piece of advice on a personal note: When he's high, take advantage of it. GET SOME REST! I know you have a million other things to do, but you can only help him if you can function yourself. I walked around in a daze for what seemed like months. I had a friend comment that the "Old Lu-Ann" was finally back. You've got to take care of yourself... sometimes other things have to wait.
I've also found that a different shooting schedule worked best for me. For all but the last few months, I shot at 6:30 am/pm. Levemir doesn't kick in for the first 4 hours, so now I shoot about 10:00 am/pm right before bed. I usually get about 6-8 hrs sleep, as his nadir is typically at +9. I wake up and check him when he's most likely coming down. I work closeby, so at 10 am I just pop home for 15 min to test/shoot/feed. Libby (Doug & Libby with Hershey - now posting over on Lantus TR) used to shoot Hershey at 3:00 due to Doug's work schedule - so by the time Libby was getting up, she could keep an eye on his numbers. It's important to find what works best for you, and if you have someone helping you (I did not). The old schedule, it wasn't uncommon for me to wake up several times overnight to test. THAT wore me out!
I'll pop in again soon and check on you guys. In the mean time, get some rest!
Lu-Ann