Pilot study evaluating the monitoring of canine diabetes mellitus in primary care practice

ObjectivesThis study aimed to describe how canine diabetes mellitus (CDM) is monitored in primary care practice (PCP) and to report outcomes.DesignRetrospective case review.SettingPCP.Participants40 dogs of 22 different pedigrees and five crossbreeds. Median age at diagnosis was nine years and six m...

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Veröffentlicht in:Veterinary record open 2019-01, Vol.6 (1), p.e000250-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Cartwright, Jennifer Ann, Cobb, Malcolm, Dunning, Mark D
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:ObjectivesThis study aimed to describe how canine diabetes mellitus (CDM) is monitored in primary care practice (PCP) and to report outcomes.DesignRetrospective case review.SettingPCP.Participants40 dogs of 22 different pedigrees and five crossbreeds. Median age at diagnosis was nine years and six months (eight years six months to 10 years five months). Dogs were diagnosed with CDM between January 1, 2008 and December 30, 2012 and remained with the practice to the study end or until death.Primary and secondary outcome measuresStability achievement and death or euthanasia. Consultations for each dog were identified and recorded through records collected from the PCP (January 1, 2008 to December 30, 2012).ResultsA median of three consultations per dog occurred in the first month, subsequently falling to a median of one consultation every 19 days thereafter. After the first month postdiagnosis, weight and single blood glucose concentrations were most frequently recorded at 66.8 and 42 per cent of consultations respectively and a blood glucose curve was performed infrequently (17.4 per cent). Serum biochemistry was measured at 8 per cent of consultations and urine culture at only 0.8 per cent. Median survival time (MST) for all dogs was eight months (2–21 months). Eighteen dogs stabilised within three months of diagnosis and their MST was 20.5 months, (10.25–25.75 months), significantly longer than the 22 dogs not achieving stability within three months (MST 2.5 months, 0–5.5 months) (P
ISSN:2052-6113
2399-2050
2052-6113
DOI:10.1136/vetreco-2017-000250