Kelly & Oscar
Very Active Member
We had a long discussion with an internal medicine vet today and I got told a lot of different things from what I have been told by my previous vet and by all my reading. Here it goes:
* There are 2 kinds of diabetic kitties: Insulin Dependent (pancreas is injured by a protein layer) and Insulin Independent (overweight cat that fat cells act like insulin binders essentially). Only II cats need to be on an "atkins diet" of ultra low carb. ID cats should have more carbs than II cats. ID cats may not ever get better because the protein layer put down in the pancreas never goes away, but sometimes the pancreas can work around it. High protein and very little carbs can cause ketones in ID cats.
* OTC foods: no matter how good, high protein, and expensive they are, they are all variable batch foods. This means that one batch of FF might have a slightly different percentage of each ingredient based on cost and availability of ingredients. Over the period of a few months you might see ingredients move around in a different order on the label. Prescription foods are set batch foods - the same ingredients are added in the same amounts each time. (I still don't like any of the Rx foods out there despite this) She also mentioned about the absorbability of certain foods (bio something she called it, I can't remember). How certain ingredients aren't processed by the cat. She said FF is one of the bad ones for this :?: I wonder if she is basing this off of the 30 some other flavors of FF that aren't all protein and it doesn't pertain to the 6 flavors that are grain free. The prescription foods she suggested are Royal Canin Diabetic DS 44 dry, Purina DM dry and canned, Iams feline low residue dry and canned, and Purina EN gastroenteric dry and canned.
* Diet: should have only 2 meals a day so to not spike the glucose levels when the insulin is trailing off. This isn't an option with Oscar since he wakes us up by 5am most mornings even with a 11pm snack put down. The same flavors should be given at the same time each day to create consistency and to see how it effects the glucose.
* Dosing: should stick with 1 ProZinc dose for 10-14 days and then do a curve at the end of this time.
* Hometesting: should not test because it stresses the cat. The stress could be acting against the insulin we are giving. Only test at the end of the 10-14 day period for the curve. I showed her the times that Oscar bottomed out at +12 through +20 and explained what would have happened if I had given our regular dose with him at 46 and her opinion didn't change. I would have killed my cat if I followed this advice. Oscar knows when it is testing time and usually comes up to me purring and ready. I really don't think it stresses him much at all.
* Asthma treatment: might want us to go down to only bronchiodilators and give flovent only as needed (shows she doesn't know how flovent works - it takes 2-4 weeks to build up before it has ANY effect at all) My worry is that bronchiodilators only treat the symptoms and don't prevent the cause. The bronchiodilators are also in pill form, which means I would be putting a pill down his throat at least once a day. Talk about something that would stress him out!
I asked her what insulin she usually starts off with for patients and she said it used to be Humilin N and now it is ProZinc. This explains her meal protocol of only 2 meals a day with no snacks I think. What is everyone's opinion on all this? I am going to try a few things she suggested:
1. We are going back down to 1u and going to hold it there for at least a week, even though we saw a big jump in drinking and peeing when we were down this low before.
2. We are going to stick to only 2 flavors of FF and give them each at the same time each day (Liver and Chicken feast at AM and Turkey and Gibblets at PM)
3. We got a new vial of ProZinc today since we are at the last 1/3 of our first vial. There might be concentration differences at the bottom of the vial that could account for things too.
4. We are only going to test at amps and pmps for a few days while he settles in.
So I am a bit more confused than I was before. This is a highly recommended internal medicine specialist in our area. I was told that we are great FD parents, but we are doing too much and might be preventing Oscar from doing better with the insulin :!: Sorry for the long winded post, but I want to see if anyone else has heard of these suggestions and 'facts' before.
* There are 2 kinds of diabetic kitties: Insulin Dependent (pancreas is injured by a protein layer) and Insulin Independent (overweight cat that fat cells act like insulin binders essentially). Only II cats need to be on an "atkins diet" of ultra low carb. ID cats should have more carbs than II cats. ID cats may not ever get better because the protein layer put down in the pancreas never goes away, but sometimes the pancreas can work around it. High protein and very little carbs can cause ketones in ID cats.
* OTC foods: no matter how good, high protein, and expensive they are, they are all variable batch foods. This means that one batch of FF might have a slightly different percentage of each ingredient based on cost and availability of ingredients. Over the period of a few months you might see ingredients move around in a different order on the label. Prescription foods are set batch foods - the same ingredients are added in the same amounts each time. (I still don't like any of the Rx foods out there despite this) She also mentioned about the absorbability of certain foods (bio something she called it, I can't remember). How certain ingredients aren't processed by the cat. She said FF is one of the bad ones for this :?: I wonder if she is basing this off of the 30 some other flavors of FF that aren't all protein and it doesn't pertain to the 6 flavors that are grain free. The prescription foods she suggested are Royal Canin Diabetic DS 44 dry, Purina DM dry and canned, Iams feline low residue dry and canned, and Purina EN gastroenteric dry and canned.
* Diet: should have only 2 meals a day so to not spike the glucose levels when the insulin is trailing off. This isn't an option with Oscar since he wakes us up by 5am most mornings even with a 11pm snack put down. The same flavors should be given at the same time each day to create consistency and to see how it effects the glucose.
* Dosing: should stick with 1 ProZinc dose for 10-14 days and then do a curve at the end of this time.
* Hometesting: should not test because it stresses the cat. The stress could be acting against the insulin we are giving. Only test at the end of the 10-14 day period for the curve. I showed her the times that Oscar bottomed out at +12 through +20 and explained what would have happened if I had given our regular dose with him at 46 and her opinion didn't change. I would have killed my cat if I followed this advice. Oscar knows when it is testing time and usually comes up to me purring and ready. I really don't think it stresses him much at all.
* Asthma treatment: might want us to go down to only bronchiodilators and give flovent only as needed (shows she doesn't know how flovent works - it takes 2-4 weeks to build up before it has ANY effect at all) My worry is that bronchiodilators only treat the symptoms and don't prevent the cause. The bronchiodilators are also in pill form, which means I would be putting a pill down his throat at least once a day. Talk about something that would stress him out!
I asked her what insulin she usually starts off with for patients and she said it used to be Humilin N and now it is ProZinc. This explains her meal protocol of only 2 meals a day with no snacks I think. What is everyone's opinion on all this? I am going to try a few things she suggested:
1. We are going back down to 1u and going to hold it there for at least a week, even though we saw a big jump in drinking and peeing when we were down this low before.
2. We are going to stick to only 2 flavors of FF and give them each at the same time each day (Liver and Chicken feast at AM and Turkey and Gibblets at PM)
3. We got a new vial of ProZinc today since we are at the last 1/3 of our first vial. There might be concentration differences at the bottom of the vial that could account for things too.
4. We are only going to test at amps and pmps for a few days while he settles in.
So I am a bit more confused than I was before. This is a highly recommended internal medicine specialist in our area. I was told that we are great FD parents, but we are doing too much and might be preventing Oscar from doing better with the insulin :!: Sorry for the long winded post, but I want to see if anyone else has heard of these suggestions and 'facts' before.