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  2. Diabetes in cats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diabetes_in_cats

    In cats with type 2 diabetes, prompt effective treatment may lead to diabetic remission, in which the cat no longer needs injected insulin. Untreated, the condition leads to increasingly weak legs in cats and eventually to malnutrition, ketoacidosis and/or dehydration, and death. Diabetes in cats can be classified into the following:

  3. Hypersomatotropism (veterinary) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypersomatotropism...

    The vast majority of cats present with diabetes mellitus, the possibility of hypersomatotropism causing it is rarely considered until the diabetes becomes difficult to control. In cats with difficult to control diabetes mellitus, hypersomatotropism should be considered as a cause only after exclusion of other conditions that can impact insulin.

  4. Vancouver Orphan Kitten Rescue Association - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vancouver_Orphan_Kitten...

    Monty - When found as a thin, frail elderly stray cat in New Westminster in early 2014, Monty's head and neck were riddled with plastic BB gun pellets. [3] [60] [61] He is blind in one eye, which appears cloudy; believed to be likely the result of the same cruelty. [61] Monty was also diagnosed with diabetes. [3]

  5. Ask a doctor: Is it possible to reverse my diabetes? - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/ask-doctor-possible-reverse...

    A study in the United Kingdom, known as the Diabetes Remission Clinical Trial (DiRECT), showed that patients could reduce blood sugar below diabetic levels — with about a third of patients ...

  6. Cushing's syndrome (veterinary) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cushing's_syndrome...

    The symptoms of Cushing's in cats is similar to that of dogs. [8] For cats the most common reason for referral resulting in a diagnosis is diabetes mellitus. Abnormal dermatological findings were the most common reason for referral after physical examination in cats. [9] 80% of cats with Cushing's develop diabetes mellitus compared to 10% of ...

  7. Talk:Diabetes in cats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Diabetes_in_cats

    If 70 percent of cats can have remission induced (and I doubt that figure) then mentioning the 20 or 30 percent is irrelevant. If there's some dispute over the numbers (and there is definitely some gray areas about remission) then I think the numbers have to be sourced and only ones that can be sourced should be used.