Hey there everyone, I introduced my cat Kyo (Male) a few weeks ago. Things have progressed quite nicely. We have stabilized our financial situation and we were able to bring him back in for another vet visit.
With a change of diet on Fancy Feast Classics, Kyo has stopped drinking and peeing like a horse, and seems to be doing very well. He's even gaining his weight back. Aside from the occasional mushy poo and very stinky number twos due to his diet change, he is comfortable for the time being. Now when we took him back, we tested him at home and his levels were at 276 after eating a snack to stay still for the test. We met with a tech at the vet and they told us to start him on a prescription food for diabetic cats. Now I remember a lot of places saying NO DRY FOOD. So I went with a canned food. Now here's the problem.
I was told to look out for products like wheat gluten, and corn starch stuff like that that he shouldn't be eating. We bought this food called Royal Canin Diabetic over the counter at the vet's. We brought it home (I didn't get a chance to read the cans before we dropped $32 on the pack because I was holding my cat) and on the back here it says there is Wheat Gluten, gelatin-by product, wheat flour, and modified corn starch. It's also in gravy. Big-nono's which I learned through researching here and on the internet. The Fancy Feast Classics I've been feeding him have none of that in it. The only thing I saw that looked questionable was guar gum. There is no wheat gluten, or any plant bi-products in it.
Now the Vet is telling us to feed him this food we bought (Royal Canin) for a week and then buy insulin and start him on it in a week, but I have a bad feeling about that Royal Canin food. We're worried it'll cause his levels to spike upward and he'll start peeing and drinking like crazy again, plus he will not eat it. He sniffs it and turns his nose up at it and walks away. But he digs into the Fancy Feast Classics. My partner says that Kyo seems to know what he needs, and to just trust his taste on this. Plus I do not feel good about feeding him so much plant bi-product after reading about how awful it is for him.
We're really at a loss. Should we listen to the vet, or keep to his diet that has been helping him recover?
With a change of diet on Fancy Feast Classics, Kyo has stopped drinking and peeing like a horse, and seems to be doing very well. He's even gaining his weight back. Aside from the occasional mushy poo and very stinky number twos due to his diet change, he is comfortable for the time being. Now when we took him back, we tested him at home and his levels were at 276 after eating a snack to stay still for the test. We met with a tech at the vet and they told us to start him on a prescription food for diabetic cats. Now I remember a lot of places saying NO DRY FOOD. So I went with a canned food. Now here's the problem.
I was told to look out for products like wheat gluten, and corn starch stuff like that that he shouldn't be eating. We bought this food called Royal Canin Diabetic over the counter at the vet's. We brought it home (I didn't get a chance to read the cans before we dropped $32 on the pack because I was holding my cat) and on the back here it says there is Wheat Gluten, gelatin-by product, wheat flour, and modified corn starch. It's also in gravy. Big-nono's which I learned through researching here and on the internet. The Fancy Feast Classics I've been feeding him have none of that in it. The only thing I saw that looked questionable was guar gum. There is no wheat gluten, or any plant bi-products in it.
Now the Vet is telling us to feed him this food we bought (Royal Canin) for a week and then buy insulin and start him on it in a week, but I have a bad feeling about that Royal Canin food. We're worried it'll cause his levels to spike upward and he'll start peeing and drinking like crazy again, plus he will not eat it. He sniffs it and turns his nose up at it and walks away. But he digs into the Fancy Feast Classics. My partner says that Kyo seems to know what he needs, and to just trust his taste on this. Plus I do not feel good about feeding him so much plant bi-product after reading about how awful it is for him.
We're really at a loss. Should we listen to the vet, or keep to his diet that has been helping him recover?