Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Rebound high blood sugar in diabetic cats explained
By Roomp, Kirsten & Rand, Jacquie·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2016·University of Luxembourg·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Rebound hyperglycaemia in diabetic cats.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of diabetic cats was monitored to see if they experienced rebound hyperglycemia (high blood sugar after low blood sugar) while being treated with insulin. Out of 55 cats, only a few showed signs of this condition, suggesting that it is quite rare in cats receiving proper insulin management. The study found that while low blood sugar happened often, the rebound effect was not common, and veterinarians should not lower insulin doses based solely on high blood sugar readings without evidence of low blood sugar.
People also search for: diabetic cat high blood sugar · rebound hyperglycemia in cats · insulin treatment for diabetic cats
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Rebound hyperglycaemia (also termed Somogyi effect) is defined as hyperglycaemia caused by the release of counter-regulatory hormones in response to insulin-induced hypoglycaemia, and is widely believed to be common in diabetic cats. However, studies in human diabetic patients over the past quarter century have rejected the common occurrence of this phenomenon. Therefore, we evaluated the occurrence and prevalence of rebound hyperglycaemia in diabetic cats. METHODS: In a retrospective study, 10,767 blood glucose curves of 55 cats treated with glargine using an intensive blood glucose regulation protocol with a median of five blood glucose measurements per day were evaluated for evidence of rebound hyperglycaemic events, defined in two different ways (with and without an insulin resistance component). RESULTS: While biochemical hypoglycaemia occurred frequently, blood glucose curves consistent with rebound hyperglycaemia with insulin resistance was confined to four single events in four different cats. In 14/55 cats (25%), a median of 1.5% (range 0.32-7.7%) of blood glucose curves were consistent with rebound hyperglycaemia without an insulin resistance component; this represented 0.42% of blood glucose curves in both affected and unaffected cats. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: We conclude that despite the frequent occurrence of biochemical hypoglycaemia, rebound hyperglycaemia is rare in cats treated with glargine on a protocol aimed at tight glycaemic control. For glargine-treated cats, insulin dose should not be reduced when there is hyperglycaemia in the absence of biochemical or clinical evidence of hypoglycaemia.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26045481/