Unfortunately for us Maia has never done well with chicken, she loves it and eats it but it gives her diarrhea and seems to mess up her over all health. We did blood work again and her liver enzymes decreased by 30% which is great! Her actual health though is not so good so that is bad. We can get her to eat which is good, but the food control is not great salmon, ham(boiled a few times to remove the salt), breaded cauliflower, Mac and cheese. Whatever we can get her to eat. It’s crazy! We have her booked with a chiropractor to check her nerve function and we are ready to get prednisone going if it is ibd. We are working closely with our vet daily, she currently is on metronidazole and amoxicillin and gabapentin. Thursday I thought we were going to lose her and she has rallied. I hate optimism as I don’t do well with a broken heart but I am hoping for the best right now. She is on 2 billion probiotic per day as well. Every bite of food I can get into her I think, ok 1 more day at least. If I have to spend all day hand feeding her, I will. She is finally sleeping and twitching a little less! She is going up and down stairs ok, not great but ok and she is no longer falling over. We are far from out of the woods but I have seen some small improvements. Thank you all for your words, encouragement, advice and stories of what you have gone through. It is tremendous to me how kind you are. Thank you for taking some time out of your day and trying to help! We so appreciate it. Mai Mai means the entire world to us and every word, suggestion, or story we take into account and thank you so much for being such a loving wonderful community. With lock down and a sick pup we feel quite overwhelmed, so thank you!
B with diabetes
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We've had a couple of diabetic basenjis come into rescue. One was around nine years old. Odd case - she never spilled more than a trace of glucose (and is also Fanconi DNA affected), yet her blood glucose when she arrived was 467! She was pretty obese. Not only is she not spilling glucose now, her blood glucose is now normal without insulin and her weight has been healthy for years. We put her on a very rigid diet (Wellness CORE weight management - no change from day to day) and a small amount of exercise (any increase bottomed her blood glucose level while we were stabilizing her). The amount of insulin needed had to be tapered back until we finally had to stop it. Unfortunately, changes had already been significant in her eyes prior to arrival, so cataracts were removed to avoid future complications. She arrived more than three years ago. Was off insulin within half a year.
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I had a dog diagnosed with diabetes when he was five, managed it for six years and he passed of cancer when he was eleven. Not much I don’t know about it and each dog is different, mine was a very fickle diabetic and I had to test him several times a day with a special dog diabetic meter called an AlphaTrak. What insulin are you using? They used to have a good one specially for dogs but they discontinued it when mine was diabetic. It’s a tough disease to manage in a dog but you can do it. You have to balance food, excercise and insulin carefully.
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@debradownsouth
I'm really confused too how could you not notice 400 bs. I notice when they weighed him he had lost
like 4 lbs. He's always been 32 lb, he was the biggest in his litter. But he acted the same playful ,ate normal. -
@dagodingo
They have him right now on Novolin 5ml x twice a day. They don't want me testing him yet. His vet is keeping him overnight next week to monitor glucose & do this every 3 months over the next 9 months. I feed Jaberi Fromm gold right now he's getting a cup with a topper of Turkey,carrots,peas, pumpkin, zucchini,chicken hearts, bone broth, pinto beans &turmeric. He is weighing in at 23lbs he has always weighed 32/33 lbs. All he does is lay around. I tried to take him for a walk only took him couple of blocks. He seemed shaky when we got back. I just hope I can just get him regulated. I'm looking into the cataract surgery but I hear it's quiet expensive.. -
So sorry to hear about this most unfortunate development. Is this Type One or Type II? I don't think there is a lot of difference in treatment initially. My guess would be it's Type One, which is really an autoimmune disease.
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I have a bitch, who today, 17Sep18, is having her diabetes cataracts done at a specialist canine ophthalmologist (eye doctor), who charges $3 500 for one eye, and $5 000 for two. We are having two. Because we are on fixed income, we are paying it off.
Her diet has changed, and her body weight has stabilised at around 11Kg (about 24 lb). Every couple of months she spends the day at the local vet to measure her BG levels. We have found her BG levels to bottom out about 2pm each day with her insulin being given at 0700 and 1900 (7 pm), followed by her meal 1 hour later. It is a chore, as the others get demanding earlier, and she gets something with the others at the earlier time so there is something to keep her going. Her diet is kangaroo mince (low fat) with some dry, senior grade, and augmented with an occasional RBBB (Raw Beef Brisket Bone). The others have been introduced to this regime of food as well.
They still get their daily walks, with her getting hers as well. She is paired with a five year old, and she has returned to playfulness, wanting to play with the boy, and although her sight is limited, she has been seen to initiate the game and the odd body slam is dished out to him. She has got her zoom back, and although she likes to sleep, (it is the end of winter here), she likes to go outside for piddles and will sunbathe if the sun comes out and the temp is above 15c. She has adapted to her changed life very well.
Do not hesitate to contact me if you need more questions answered/replied to address a diabetes action plan. Good luck.
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@donc said in B with diabetes:
So sorry to hear about this most unfortunate development. Is this Type One or Type II? I don't think there is a lot of difference in treatment initially. My guess would be it's Type One, which is really an autoimmune disease.
Dogs get type 1, cats generally get type 2.
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@suzanjg said in B with diabetes:
@dagodingo
They have him right now on Novolin 5ml x twice a day.... All he does is lay around. I tried to take him for a walk only took him couple of blocks. He seemed shaky when we got back. I just hope I can just get him regulated. I'm looking into the cataract surgery but I hear it's quiet expensive..I am not a vet, but I do find your vet setting a 5 mg and not having you test to be very strange. Being tired and being shakey are signs of blood sugar being too high or low. Talk to a dog diabetes specialist. Testing really is critical.
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@suzanjg my dog initially was on vetsulin and did very well (https://www.vetsulin.com/dogs/vetsulin.aspx) it is available again now I think. Around 2009 they stopped producing it so we had to switch to Humulin, which is the same as Novolin I believe. The vet should have done an initial test to set his dosage? They then calculate how much insulin he needs, however even small changes in excercise and diet will change that. Only home testing will tell you if his sugar is correct. A simpler and less accurate way is to test with Diastix which will let you know if he is too high, test him twice a day and if they change color, then take him back to the vet. Vets are not diabetes specialists and it is a complicated disease. The Diastix will only tell you if his sugar is way too high, I presume the vet told you to load up syringes of syrup in case of him going low? My dog only went low once at night in the whole six years but it is an emergency if they do. The key is to stick to a routine that works and don’t change anything, weigh his food so there is consistency, excercise consistently, check his sugar regularly. No regular dog treats as most will spike his sugar, fresh unprocessed chicken is ok in moderation etc.
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@debradownsouth said in B with diabetes:
Dogs get type 1, cats generally get type 2.
While you're correct that dogs usually get Type One and cats Type 2, either can get either. Bummer regardless.