Amanda23 said:
Hi everyone,
I posted for the first time yesterday over in the main health board:
viewtopic.php?f=28&t=62063
I am now seeking some specific advice on Lantus. My kitty Thomas was only diagnosed last Friday, and we've gone from 0.5 units once daily (3 days) to 1 unit once daily (2 days) to 2 units once daily (yesterday) and now she's telling me to increase to 3 based on his BG readings from yesterday (summarized in my other post).
I am freaking out - on the one hand, she's my vet and my clinic is really, really good (they are a holistic vet and have provided phenomenal care in the past), but on the other hand, everything I read here tells me this is a bad plan. I really don't know what to do. Any help would be much appreciated.
Amanda (and Thomas)
Nooooo.Too fast and is a recipe for harm to your cat. Vet did a curve? Throw those numbers OUT THE WINDOW. Most cats are stressed by the vet visits, so any numbers obtained in that fashion aren't of much use... What were the numbers the vet got? Get that info and let's see if the vet is making a call on the BG at shot times or at the lowest point, mid cycle, nadir.
My two cats are completely different. Shadoe ALWAYS tests higher at the vet; she is stressed and freezes like a rock at the vet. I test her at home before we leave, put her in the carrier, then test her when we arrive at the vet, and finally, test her when we get home and 30min later. BIG differences in the numbers... the first and last tests give decent numbers but the ones in the middle? HIGH.
Oliver is the opposite. I have to take HC food to the vet because weirdly he goes LOW at the vet office! One time I had to feed him AT the vet office to try and bring his numbers up.
So, home testing is the best way to know how your cat is REALLY doing at home and in his own comfy spots.
By your vet wanting to increase too quickly, it's obvious that she is not aware of the Lantus shed that has to be taken into account. Also, cats are
NOT dosed once a day; they need shots every 12 hours as they have faster metabolisms. You will get nowhere fast with once a day shots and changing up the dose all the time. The only place you may get is overdosing your cat as this other vet said. To use a word from Judge Judy.... ridiculous!
The shed's no different than some meds your dr gives to you and you are told that you need to give it a few days to build up in your system before you will feel the effects.
You are home testing. There are many cats who never need a dose as high at 3units, so scrap that idea.
You would be wise to go with 1unit twice a day and test at home, then after 4 days or so, make a decision on the dose based on the lowest point of the cycles.
Now, let's get to the food business. If you test and feed now, then test again in 1hour, I bet you are going to see a higher number which will give you a false number to base a decision of whether to shoot or not. After another hour, that BG will come down and you may find you gave too much insulin.
The general rule is usually do not feed for TWO HOURS before shot time. Why? because you want the cat to be free of food in the system. It's really no different from being told to fast by your dr if you are having some tests done. Why? because you need your system to be free of any things that could give an incorrect reading on the tests. So NO food for TWO HOURS before the shot, and then you are getting a true empty-stomach/system BG number.
Be sure you get your mom to let you know if she is seeing a fast drop in numbers; you have some HC handy to feed if the numbers are dropping too fast? Numbers can be manipulated with food, so once you have gathered some numbers/data, we can help you see if you need to give some mini meals at certain times to slow drops.