oreosmom
Member Since 2012
Hello,
We are in conflict and need advice. Our vet is adament about not doing frequent testing. When Oreo was diagnosed with GI lymphoma and then diabetes, we were told to test only two or three times a week. His numbers were in the 300's at the time. His insulin dosage was slowly increased as well - up to 3.0 units of Lantus. Since September, we started noticing a steady decline in his numbers. On September 23, his BG dropped in the 80's, which was caught on the day we were doing curves. We know this is a normal number , but for Oreo it was very unusual. It was scary, but awakened us to the fact that we were not in control of the situation. Since then we have done testing about three times a day. In the past few weeks we are seeing a steady decline in his numbers. We asked the vet and she was reluctant to decrease the insulin. Using our intuition, we did drop him by half a unit. This morning at the nadir, his BG dropped to 76! After a can of regular cat food, I phoned the vet and told her that we dropped the dose by 1/2 unit, and he still was very low. She was very insistant NOT to drop the dosage. I was told by her assistant that if he goes hypo, I will know it and can just administer Karo syrup. But we don't want to be here 24-7 waiting for him to go hypo! Finally, the vet told us we could drop him to 2.0 units, but no lower.
I was given a lecture today on the evils of frequent testing and that it will cause us to go crazy. (Too late!) Well, we were going crazy with worry when we weren't testing since we didn't know what was going on!
We finally put a spreadsheet together and posted it tonight. We wondered if any of you have had similar experiences dealing with your vets and if you came to any resolution? There seems to be a philosophical difference about how you deal with diabetes - where does it come, from how might we resolve it?
Thank you!
Oreo's Mom
We are in conflict and need advice. Our vet is adament about not doing frequent testing. When Oreo was diagnosed with GI lymphoma and then diabetes, we were told to test only two or three times a week. His numbers were in the 300's at the time. His insulin dosage was slowly increased as well - up to 3.0 units of Lantus. Since September, we started noticing a steady decline in his numbers. On September 23, his BG dropped in the 80's, which was caught on the day we were doing curves. We know this is a normal number , but for Oreo it was very unusual. It was scary, but awakened us to the fact that we were not in control of the situation. Since then we have done testing about three times a day. In the past few weeks we are seeing a steady decline in his numbers. We asked the vet and she was reluctant to decrease the insulin. Using our intuition, we did drop him by half a unit. This morning at the nadir, his BG dropped to 76! After a can of regular cat food, I phoned the vet and told her that we dropped the dose by 1/2 unit, and he still was very low. She was very insistant NOT to drop the dosage. I was told by her assistant that if he goes hypo, I will know it and can just administer Karo syrup. But we don't want to be here 24-7 waiting for him to go hypo! Finally, the vet told us we could drop him to 2.0 units, but no lower.
I was given a lecture today on the evils of frequent testing and that it will cause us to go crazy. (Too late!) Well, we were going crazy with worry when we weren't testing since we didn't know what was going on!
We finally put a spreadsheet together and posted it tonight. We wondered if any of you have had similar experiences dealing with your vets and if you came to any resolution? There seems to be a philosophical difference about how you deal with diabetes - where does it come, from how might we resolve it?
Thank you!
Oreo's Mom