Hi-
Monitoring the ferrets' glucose levels, as well as being able to establish
patterns, is a great idea. Although, I'm not sure if the calibration would
matter, or whether human or ferret blood would make a difference in its
accuracy. If you haven't already, you could contact customer service, and
someone there should be able to tell you.
I also want to say that if you plan to use one of the many automatic lancet
devices available, my personal suggestion is... DON'T!
I was diagnosed twenty-nine years ago with Type I Diabetes. So far, after
a pancreas transplant in January, I am insulin-free! I checked my level
three to five times a day, every day. I always ended up with a
long-lasting and very painful bruise. No matter the manufacturer, depth
setting, etc.
It hurts me to think of how a ferret would feel, only once a day. I
pricked my fingertip manually. I just poked it with the lancet myself.
Much less pain and trauma. It usually only took one try, too.
As for clipping a nail to collect blood; I wouldn't, unless that was the
only option. Luckily, I have never clipped an animal's nail short enough
to cause it to bleed. However, I once cut our German Shepherd's nail a bit
too short. She NEVER forgot it, and from then on it was a challenge every
time.
Sincerely,
Sonya
P.S. Don't know much about the laser meter, except that the manufacturer
is somewhere in Arkansas, Little Rock, I think. I would guess that its
somewhat expensive though. Seeing as how any "new" technology always is.
[Posted in FML issue 2920]
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