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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How often do dogs with high blood sugar need insulin treatment

By DiNinni, Angielee & Hess, Rebecka S·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2024·Department of Clinical Sciences and Advanced Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Development of a requirement for exogenous insulin treatment in dogs with hyperglycemia.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A study looked at 1,318 dogs that had high blood sugar levels but were not being treated for diabetes. Over a follow-up period of 7 to 12 years, only 29 of these dogs (about 3.5%) ended up needing insulin treatment for diabetes. Interestingly, most of the dogs that developed diabetes had blood sugar levels that were not extremely high. This suggests that just having high blood sugar doesn't always mean a dog will develop diabetes that requires insulin.

People also search for: dog high blood sugar symptoms · diabetes treatment for dogs · insulin for dogs with diabetes

Abstract

BACKGROUND: It has been suggested that overt diabetes mellitus in dogs be defined based on a persistent fasting blood glucose concentration (BGC) >144&#x2009;mg/dL. OBJECTIVE: Determine the number of dogs with randomly identified hyperglycemia without insulin-treated diabetes mellitus (ITDM) that later develop a need for exogenous insulin treatment. ANIMALS: A total of 1318 dogs examined at a university teaching hospital without ITDM and with randomly identified hyperglycemia. METHODS: Retrospective longitudinal study. Hyperglycemia was defined as randomly identified BGC above >112&#x2009;mg/dL, moderate hyperglycemia as BGC >144&#x2009;mg/dL but <200&#x2009;mg/dL and pronounced hyperglycemia as BGC &#x2265;200&#x2009;mg/dL. Dogs were defined as having ITDM if they were treated with insulin. Follow-up was attempted 7 to 12&#x2009;years after hyperglycemia was documented to determine if over time dogs developed a need for exogenous insulin treatment. RESULTS: Twenty-nine of 824 dogs (3.5%) with hyperglycemia and follow-up information developed ITDM, including 3/824 dogs (0.4%) with moderate hyperglycemia, and 2/824 dogs (0.2%) with pronounced hyperglycemia. Most dogs with hyperglycemia that developed ITDM (24/29, 83%) had BGC &#x2264;144&#x2009;mg/dL. Among dogs that eventually developed a need for exogenous insulin treatment, no association was found between the degree of hyperglycemia and the time interval between documentation of hyperglycemia and diagnosis of ITDM. Logistic regression determined that BGC is not significantly associated with ITDM. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Most dogs with randomly identified hyperglycemia did not develop a need for exogenous insulin treatment. Other criteria could be required to augment the definition of overt DM in non-insulin treated dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38205886/