Websterthecat
Member Since 2014
Hi everyone. After 4 days of collecting numbers on Webster I'm considering cutting back on checking his BG several times per day. Why?
Last night has started to run and hide every time that we approach him. We actually just found him hiding in bathtub which is a first. I butchered his ears from the moment we brought him home from the vet and took his first reading which was at 45. I went into panic mode and barely knew what I was doing with the lancet. His ears are all red, inflamed and bruised. In addition, we have been forcing Liquid AB down his throat 2x per day for the past 4 days plus giving him his insulin. (which is actually the one thing that he doesn't seem to mind). Not to mention, I have been trying to get him switched over from all dry food to LC wet food. Last night and this morning he gave me a nasty look that I have never seen from such a sweet cat. :sad:
I understand the importance of testing which is to understand how he reacts to the insulin so that slow adjustments can be made and to catch low numbers but.. Given the circumstances:
-The AB seems to be compounded in a sweet syrup, which has likely thrown his BG out of wack. My initial guess was the he would be finished with his bottle by now but there is still a good bit left - Maybe another 2-3 days?
-He's still favoring his old dry food over the LC wet food. He does however seem to be eating a bit of his LC. The dry food is also driving up his BG.
-His ears are sore and he lets you know it. The fold back and his head turns away whenever you start playing with his ears to get blood.
-I don't want my cat to hate me. We have always had a great relationship and I don't want him to run and hide. :-|
I would like to test him 2 times per day before each insulin shot to ensure that I'm not shooting in dangerous territory. I would also like to give his ears some time to heal, finish with the AB, and transition to low car food prior to testing on a regular basis. This should give me more accurate data to work with? Right?
You guys gave me some great tips and links yesterday viewtopic.php?f=9&t=128645 which I used last night and today with much better results. I really need to practice my technique and allow his ears to heal a bit. Right now they are coated with Neo+pain.
In addition, my wife and I are having a difficult time dealing with all of these issues at once. As everyone here knows, it's not easy to deal with.
I want the best for Webster but trying to consider the pain that he is experiencing while trying to keep my sanity.
Please advise. Thank you all.
Last night has started to run and hide every time that we approach him. We actually just found him hiding in bathtub which is a first. I butchered his ears from the moment we brought him home from the vet and took his first reading which was at 45. I went into panic mode and barely knew what I was doing with the lancet. His ears are all red, inflamed and bruised. In addition, we have been forcing Liquid AB down his throat 2x per day for the past 4 days plus giving him his insulin. (which is actually the one thing that he doesn't seem to mind). Not to mention, I have been trying to get him switched over from all dry food to LC wet food. Last night and this morning he gave me a nasty look that I have never seen from such a sweet cat. :sad:
I understand the importance of testing which is to understand how he reacts to the insulin so that slow adjustments can be made and to catch low numbers but.. Given the circumstances:
-The AB seems to be compounded in a sweet syrup, which has likely thrown his BG out of wack. My initial guess was the he would be finished with his bottle by now but there is still a good bit left - Maybe another 2-3 days?
-He's still favoring his old dry food over the LC wet food. He does however seem to be eating a bit of his LC. The dry food is also driving up his BG.
-His ears are sore and he lets you know it. The fold back and his head turns away whenever you start playing with his ears to get blood.
-I don't want my cat to hate me. We have always had a great relationship and I don't want him to run and hide. :-|
I would like to test him 2 times per day before each insulin shot to ensure that I'm not shooting in dangerous territory. I would also like to give his ears some time to heal, finish with the AB, and transition to low car food prior to testing on a regular basis. This should give me more accurate data to work with? Right?
You guys gave me some great tips and links yesterday viewtopic.php?f=9&t=128645 which I used last night and today with much better results. I really need to practice my technique and allow his ears to heal a bit. Right now they are coated with Neo+pain.
In addition, my wife and I are having a difficult time dealing with all of these issues at once. As everyone here knows, it's not easy to deal with.
I want the best for Webster but trying to consider the pain that he is experiencing while trying to keep my sanity.
Please advise. Thank you all.