Diabetes Mellitus in Dogs: Causes, Symptoms, and Treatment

 
Diabetese Mellitus
(Hypoinsulinism)
 
Dr. Vivek Kr. Singh
Assistant Professor
Department of Veterinary Clinical Complex
 
UNIT-3
 
 
“Diabetes mellitus is an endocrine disorder,
characterized by 
polyuria
, 
polyphagia
, loss
of body condition and development of
cataract
 
Etiology
 
Deficiency of insulin
Insulin
deficiency
 
Absolute insulin
deficiency
 
 
Destruction of 
β
- cells
(Due to certain viruses, Immune-mediated
destruction, Pancreatitis )
 
Type-I / Insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
(IDDM)
 
Relative insulin deficiency
 
Due to development of insulin
resistance
 
Type-II/Non-insulin dependent diabetes
mellitus
 
 
Diabetes is more common in middle-aged
dogs of 4-14 years (Highest at 7-9 yrs)
 
Females are more affected compared to males
 
Poodles, Daschunds, Terrier and Beagle
breeds are more susceptible
 
Pathogenesis
   
Glucose utilization is insulin dependent
                      Insulin deficiency
        Hyperglycemia
 
Blood glucose crosses renal threshold (175-
220mg/dl)
 
 
     Glycosuria
 
               
Glycosuria  creates  osmotic diuresis
 
 
       Polyuria
 
 
     Polydipsia
                
Cellular hypoglycaemia
 
 
Stimulation of satiety centre
Gluconeogenesis
 
       Polyphagia
 
 
Accumulation of      
Mobilization of Fat depots
Ketone bodies
 
 
Diabetic ketoacidosis           Cachexia
 
Clinical Findings
 
Polyuria
Loss of body condition in spite of good appetite
Weakness
Lethargy
Recurrent episodes of skin infection
Cyctitis
Bilateral cataract
Ketotic breath
 
Diagnosis
 
Age of the animal and symptoms
 
Glycosuria (Benedict’s test)
 
Repeated value of fasting blood glucose
150mg/dl and above
 
Glucose tolerance test
 
Treatment
 
Diabetes mellitus is complex disease to treat as it is a
multi-organ affecting problem
The primary goal of diabetes treatment is
maintenance of patient’s blood glucose levels as close
to normal as possible i.e. 100 mg/dl
Diet modification and insulin supplementation
Insulin can be given 
@ 0.25 U/kg bwt 
twice daily
oral hypoglycemic agents used in veterinary practice
worldwide are 
Sulfonylureas
, 
Bigunide
 and
Thiazolidinedione
 
 
                     
Thank You
Slide Note
Embed
Share

Diabetes mellitus is a common endocrine disorder in dogs, characterized by symptoms like polyuria, polyphagia, and cataract development. The etiology involves insulin deficiency and insulin resistance, leading to hyperglycemia and various clinical manifestations. Diagnosis is based on symptoms, glycosuria tests, and blood glucose levels. Treatment includes diet modification, insulin supplementation, and oral hypoglycemic agents to manage blood glucose levels effectively.

  • Diabetes Mellitus
  • Dogs
  • Insulin Deficiency
  • Symptoms
  • Treatment

Uploaded on Sep 28, 2024 | 0 Views


Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author. Download presentation by click this link. If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Diabetese Mellitus (Hypoinsulinism) UNIT-3 Dr. Vivek Kr. Singh Assistant Professor Department of Veterinary Clinical Complex

  2. Diabetes mellitus is an endocrine disorder, characterized by polyuria, polyphagia, loss of body condition and development of cataract

  3. Etiology Insulin deficiency Deficiency of insulin Absolute insulin deficiency Relative insulin deficiency Destruction of - cells (Due to certain viruses, Immune-mediated destruction, Pancreatitis ) Due to development of insulin resistance Type-II/Non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus Type-I / Insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM)

  4. Diabetes is more common in middle-aged dogs of 4-14 years (Highest at 7-9 yrs) Females are more affected compared to males Poodles, Daschunds, Terrier and Beagle breeds are more susceptible

  5. Pathogenesis Cellular hypoglycaemia Glucose utilization is insulin dependent Insulin deficiency Hyperglycemia Stimulation of satiety centre Gluconeogenesis Blood glucose crosses renal threshold (175- 220mg/dl) Polyphagia Glycosuria Accumulation of Mobilization of Fat depots Ketone bodies Glycosuria creates osmotic diuresis Polyuria Diabetic ketoacidosis Cachexia Polydipsia

  6. Clinical Findings Polyuria Loss of body condition in spite of good appetite Weakness Lethargy Recurrent episodes of skin infection Cyctitis Bilateral cataract Ketotic breath

  7. Diagnosis Age of the animal and symptoms Glycosuria (Benedict s test) Repeated value of fasting blood glucose 150mg/dl and above Glucose tolerance test

  8. Treatment Diabetes mellitus is complex disease to treat as it is a multi-organ affecting problem The primary goal of diabetes treatment is maintenance of patient s blood glucose levels as close to normal as possible i.e. 100 mg/dl Diet modification and insulin supplementation Insulin can be given @ 0.25 U/kg bwt twice daily oral hypoglycemic agents used in veterinary practice worldwide are Sulfonylureas, Thiazolidinedione Bigunide and

  9. Thank You

Related


More Related Content

giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#