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Study of 253 dogs in the United Kingdom with diabetes mellitus
118
Citations
27
References
2005
Year
Animal PhysiologyVeterinary PhysiologyWorking DogClinical InformationDiabetesPhysiologyVeterinary ScienceVeterinary ResearchSmall Animal Internal MedicineYorkshire TerriersUnited KingdomDiabetes MellitusPublic HealthMedicineCompanion AnimalEpidemiologyInsulin Injections
Clinical information and blood samples were collected from 253 dogs with naturally occurring diabetes mellitus. Over half of them were labrador retrievers, collies, Yorkshire terriers or crossbred dogs, and approximately 80 per cent of them were diagnosed between the ages of five and 12 years. The majority of the dogs were receiving insulin therapy once a day, but in the dogs receiving insulin injections twice a day there was a trend for lower serum fructosamine concentrations, suggesting better glycaemic control. The proportion of female dogs with diabetes was lower than in previous surveys. The disease was diagnosed more commonly in the winter months, a seasonal pattern also observed in human beings with diabetes, suggesting that similar environmental factors might be involved in the disease.
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