Hi Robin! thanks for replying.
I usually feed Scout between 7 & 8 and give him his nightly shot of insulin at 8:30. The other day when Scout had his first low numbers, I gave him 1.5 units- i called the vet on monday and she said that was good and told me i can scale it from now on.
Scout weighs in at about 12.8 lbs right now (was 20 lb last november 2014, diagnosed in may 2015 at 11ish lbs). the amount of food he gets varies- but usually 3-4 3oz cans of FF/nutro wet food per day.
someone told me that i should avoid dry food even when he's getting low numbers- something about it takes too long to get in and out of the system? any advice on that topic?
Cindi is absolutely right: Please don't wait 30 min to 1.5 hrs. after the meal to give Scout the insulin. Ck. BG, feed, then immediately shoot (provided your pre-shot # is in safe zone, of course). I get the dose loaded into the syringe when Bat is about halfway through her meal, so that I can administer it right when she's finished up. I'd be hesitant to do much scaling of the dose right now, at least not until you have some sort of a good baseline with Scout - only because sometimes it takes a few cycles before a kitty "settles into" an insulin dose, so too many dose adjustments can cause bouncing, adding to the confusion with his BG #s.
Where food is concerned, don't feed him dry kibble, period: Too many carbs! I'm convinced that's how Bat-Bat became overweight (she used to be close to 20 lbs., too. Only Maine Coons should weigh that much!) Bat gets only about 2-1/4 cans of FF Classic turkey/giblets daily, and her weight is holding steady at a healthy 11 to 11.5 lbs. Would she
like to eat more? Sure! But overfeeding her would
not help me control her diabetes. I simply learned to turn a deaf ear to her "oh, but I'm
starving..." routine, because she's actually not being starved at all. (Took her a while to stop pestering me all the time, though!)
What is your schedule like, btw? Are you gone most of the day for work, or do you work from home?