Greetings all,
I have a 12-year-old DSH tabby who, seemingly out of nowhere, started walking oddly with a much larger surface of his legs being used this June while we were on vacation. We assumed it was some sort of jumping-related injury that occurred while we were gone, but took him to see the vet after it didn't subside.
At the vet, Ziggy tested with a glucose level around 380. He wasn't starved beforehand and we have no idea when he had last eaten, but the vet thought it was neuropathy from diabetes and put him on four units twice per day of vetsulin u-40 and a prescription w/d food.
What strikes me as odd is that the w/d prescription food seems to be the exact kind of food we would have avoided for an obligate carnivore - low in protein, high in "moisture" and fillers, and reliant on ingredients like corn. I feel like I'm now waiting on a prescription to pay $80/bag a very low-rated food. In addition to that, I'm paying around $50/month for the insulin and around $50 for the syringes. While I'm thankful that the $180 increase in pet costs isn't catastrophic, I only want to continue this if it's the option that will give Ziggy the best quality of life. I'm not so much concerned about the costs (though of course I'm not super happy about them), but I'm concerned about what seems to be an illogical circle of treatment.
And, I suppose here enters my overall question. I've been reading a lot and watching a lot of videos on wet food and keto dry food and I've become critical of the idea of giving our cat a mediocre food that is still high in carbs along with insulin injections to digest those carbs. For a species that is very non-carb-dependent, there must be a better way. I've been reading about wet food options and dry foods like Keto-Kibble (62% protein, 16% fat) which is very very low carb, rather then giving them this w/d food which seems to be full of bad ingredients and low protein.
We travel often and we have other pets in the house. If injections and this w/d food are the best option, so be it. Perhaps it's my lack of information or perhaps I'm over-humanizing this situation. It seems to me that if cats don't have much need for carbs, perhaps it makes more sense to feed them a virtually-carb-free diet rather than giving them what looks like junk food combined with sticking them with sharps twice every day.
I have a 12-year-old DSH tabby who, seemingly out of nowhere, started walking oddly with a much larger surface of his legs being used this June while we were on vacation. We assumed it was some sort of jumping-related injury that occurred while we were gone, but took him to see the vet after it didn't subside.
At the vet, Ziggy tested with a glucose level around 380. He wasn't starved beforehand and we have no idea when he had last eaten, but the vet thought it was neuropathy from diabetes and put him on four units twice per day of vetsulin u-40 and a prescription w/d food.
What strikes me as odd is that the w/d prescription food seems to be the exact kind of food we would have avoided for an obligate carnivore - low in protein, high in "moisture" and fillers, and reliant on ingredients like corn. I feel like I'm now waiting on a prescription to pay $80/bag a very low-rated food. In addition to that, I'm paying around $50/month for the insulin and around $50 for the syringes. While I'm thankful that the $180 increase in pet costs isn't catastrophic, I only want to continue this if it's the option that will give Ziggy the best quality of life. I'm not so much concerned about the costs (though of course I'm not super happy about them), but I'm concerned about what seems to be an illogical circle of treatment.
And, I suppose here enters my overall question. I've been reading a lot and watching a lot of videos on wet food and keto dry food and I've become critical of the idea of giving our cat a mediocre food that is still high in carbs along with insulin injections to digest those carbs. For a species that is very non-carb-dependent, there must be a better way. I've been reading about wet food options and dry foods like Keto-Kibble (62% protein, 16% fat) which is very very low carb, rather then giving them this w/d food which seems to be full of bad ingredients and low protein.
We travel often and we have other pets in the house. If injections and this w/d food are the best option, so be it. Perhaps it's my lack of information or perhaps I'm over-humanizing this situation. It seems to me that if cats don't have much need for carbs, perhaps it makes more sense to feed them a virtually-carb-free diet rather than giving them what looks like junk food combined with sticking them with sharps twice every day.