Critter Mom
Member Since 2014
Snap!How many hours since his shot?
Snap!How many hours since his shot?
Three hours since I gave him 4 units.How many hours since his shot?
Missed this earlier. That is very reminiscent of Saoirse's behaviour when she was on Caninsulin.He's finally stopped turning his face to the wall and has come out to socialize a little with me! He won't really look at me, but he's settled in next to me![]()
Three hours, and I always use the Alphatrak numbers for the vet. She doesn't approve of using a human meter!How long after injection time is that, Lucy?
BTW, if you get any low numbers test with the Alphatrak for your vet instead of sticking to a set time in the cycle. That way she can't diss your data on grounds that a human meter isn't telling the real story.
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Okay, will do.I would offer him the food now rather than waiting an hour.
I was very much assuming this to be the case. The thing is your vet has asked you to give her results for a spot check pretty much at the same time in each cycle. To enable you to steward your relationship with your vet, it will very much strengthen your credibility with her if you can show her the low readings - Squallie's true nadirs - tested on equipment from which she is prepared to accept the results, and which she therefore has no grounds to dismiss out of hand.Three hours, and I always use the Alphatrak numbers for the vet. She doesn't approve of using a human meter!
I got him to eat a couple of mouthfuls of Evo dry and maybe a 1/2 tbsp of no-carb canned. Should I try him on some canned food with carbs?I would offer him the food now rather than waiting an hour.
That's exactly what I'm doing. I 'm going to keep testing and calling with numbers and patterns until I get her attention or she tells me to find another vet!I was very much assuming this to be the case. The thing is your vet has asked you to give her results for a spot check pretty much at the same time in the cycle. To enable you to steward your relationship with your vet, it will very much strengthen your credibility with her if you can show her the low readings - Squallie's true nadirs - tested on equipment from which she is prepared to accept the results, and which she therefore has no grounds to dismiss out of hand.
Cats don't read vet manuals. They nadir when they nadir, not when the vet thinks they should.
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Okay, thanks! This is making me crazy; this is the first time in three days that I have remembered to take my own daily medicine, I have been so focused on Squallie! I just worry all the time now that his BG is going to plunge too low!What he ate should be ok. Test at +4 and see if it slowed things down, I think.
Mogs, do you know if I can use Alphatrak 2 test strips in a plain Alphatrak glucometer? I am almost out of strips and can only find Alphatrak 2.
You really need to take care of yourself! You need to take care of YOU so you can take care of Squallie and the rest of your family. So stop, breathe, and remember your own meds.Okay, thanks! This is making me crazy; this is the first time in three days that I have remembered to take my own daily medicine, I have been so focused on Squallie! I just worry all the time now that his BG is going to plunge too low!
It's purple, and I'm a total idiot! The box just says Alphatrak but when I glanced at the meter just now to check the color it states very clearly at the top "AlphaTRAK2"!Is your meter grey, Lucy?
Lol, I've done this for years and have a tendency to ignore them when I'm busy, figuring I'll get to it as soon as I can, and of course then I promptly forget as my mind moves on to the next crisis!If you've a smart phone with a calendar app, you might set timers to remind you to take your meds.
I call my phone my pocket memory!
Agreed!I'm also thinking even 4u is more than enough, and going forward, 2u or at most 3u every 12 hours makes sense.
ThanksNice one. The Alphatrak 2 strips can be used with the grey Alphatrak meter but you need to set a different reference number on it.
The Alphatrak is specifically designed for veterinary use in dogs and cats. The values are a little different, but basically a meter is a meter, as long as you know the parameters of the numbers. I only use two because I got the Relion to test Squallie before my vet told me to, and she doesn't approve of using a human meter and testing from the ear. So I bought the Alphatrak from her to keep her happy, and she is familiar with those values rather than the Relion. I only use those numbers for her reference, really. I don't think 've explained this very well, I hope I haven't just added more confusion!stupid q inbound: What is an alphtatrak and why is it Differnt then a relion meter? Is it specifically for animals? Why does it read different? Why do you test with 2? (just curious).
Thank you, you explained it SO much better than I did, Lol!@pevsfreedom -
The concentration of glucose in blood differs between animals and humans. Veterinary meters such as the Alphatrak are calibrated to suit animals and give a 'truer' measure of, say, cat blood glucose than a human meter. Human meters give lower readings than veterinary meters, but they are consistently lower and therefore suitable for measuring cats' blood glucose levels provided a cat-specific human meter reference range is used. For example, you will see the hypo threshold quoted on this site as 50mg/dL (2.8mmol/L) on a human meter, and 68mg/dL (3.8mmol/L) for an Alphatrak.
The human meter test strips are much cheaper so it reduces the cost of managing the care of a diabetic cat, especially if one is endeavouring to keep one's cat quite tightly regulated and therefore testing frequently.
Lucy's using two meters because the human meter's cheaper for day to day testing and the vet wants to see test data from the Alphatrak.
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Well, at +5 he's back up to 126, after some FF Pate at +4. Still no call from vet.
He is extremely patient, my sweet boy. Of my 4 cats, he's the only one I could work with like this, especially by myself. If it was my Bengal boy Khoji I'd be in serious trouble, no way could I test and shoot him.@Squalliesmom, BJM has a handy glucometer guide you can show your vet: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1oI_34_EgqeKdpyttFW0oLoG1mbw16IkATAWHhoQD2JU/pub
Getting blood from one meter is enough for me! You must have a very patient cat!
Sorry I didn't see this earlier and respond, when I made sure his #'s were coming up I took a much-needed nap!Are you OK for now, Lucy? I need to duck away.
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Yes, and I'm really miffed that she never called me back today after I called in numbers. Here's how that went down: I called yesterday, office was closed, left msg w/BG #s; Tech/asst called me this AM and "scolded" me for not calling in #s, I set her straight on that count and gave her AMPS #s as well at that time, also said I'd call at +3 hrs with update; called w/update, she said vet wasn't there, she would have her call re: #s; waited, called back myself, asked for info on Alphatrak test strip purchase, basically got "scolded" again for wanting to buy them online, where they are cheaper; still no call-back from vet. I'm starting to wonder if the vet ever got the messages! I am more than a little annoyed; I used to like this tech, but now I am having serious issues with her! :-( :-(I agree. I would forget the whole every 8 hours option. I think your vet is completely wrong with that idea.

Squallie is at 233 at +8. There's just no way giving him 4-4-4 at 8 hr intervals is ever going to be viable. I don't think he should be given ANY insulin at +8; I'll check him again at +12.
Excuse me???basically got "scolded" again for wanting to buy them online
Agreed!!!I'm glad you managed to get some rest, Lucy. I remember going through this last year. It's tough.
I get the sense that you're still dealing with a bit of a dilemma between choosing whether to do what the vet is asking you to do, or instead to listen to what Squallie's body is telling you he needs.
I don't really stick my neck out when it comes to dosing, but I feel I need to this time. I've seen Squallie's data and I also think your vet is completely wrong about 8-8-8 dosing. I think your vet is completely wrong about a lot of things when it comes to treatment of feline diabetes. (Your vet has already given you dangerous dosing advice this week.)
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I know, this has occurred to me before, as well. I just don't know. Even if I continue taking Squallie to her, what, as you say, would I do in a dire emergency?!? I don't think she is equipped to deal with it!I know that driving to a closer vet is more convenient and easier on the wallet in terms of gas not to mention the time involved, but in your shoes I personally would be done and looking for another vet option. It may be farther away but it would be more than worth it to me to keep my furbaby in competent medical hands. You don't have to put up with this treatment by the tech or the "howling" bad directives and lack of response by this vet in just the past couple of days. What happens when there is something going on of a really serious nature that you can't handle?? Make no mistake about it, you are the one who saved Squallie this week not once but a few times. It's worth thinking about...
I know, this has occurred to me before, as well. I just don't know. Even if I continue taking Squallie to her, what, as you say, would I do in a dire emergency?!? I don't think she is equipped to deal with it!