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Dog Diabetic Glucose Curve Interpreter Calculator

Suyash Dhoot by Suyash Dhoot
24 May 2026
in Calculator, Medication, Wellness
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Dog Diabetic Glucose Curve Interpreter Calculator - free PuppaDogs calculator

Dog Diabetic Glucose Curve Interpreter Calculator

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ACVIM diabetes-based
Dog Diabetic Glucose Curve Interpreter
Read the 12-hour BGC – nadir, duration, rebound pattern
A 12-hour blood glucose curve is the gold standard for diabetic dog management. Enter readings every 2 hours after insulin and this tool identifies the nadir, duration of action, and any concerning patterns (Somogyi rebound, short duration) with suggested dose adjustments.
Decision-support tool. Insulin adjustment must be done with veterinary supervision. Hypoglycaemia from over-zealous adjustment is the leading cause of insulin-related death in dogs. Use this calculator to interpret the curve and discuss the suggested adjustment with your vet.

The Blood Glucose Curve – Gold Standard For Diabetic Dogs

A 12-hour blood glucose curve (BGC) is the gold standard for assessing insulin response in diabetic dogs. Spot checks of glucose tell you only one moment in time; the curve tells you the shape of insulin’s action — when it starts working, how low BG goes (nadir), how long the effect lasts (duration), and whether there is rebound. The shape drives every meaningful dose decision.

This calculator interprets readings taken every 2 hours after insulin administration and identifies:

  • Nadir — the lowest BG and when it occurs (drives the dose adjustment)
  • Duration of action — time BG stays below 250 mg/dL (13.9 mmol/L)
  • Peak — highest BG (usually pre-insulin)
  • Pattern flags — Somogyi rebound, short duration of action, insufficient peak suppression

What A Good Curve Looks Like

An ideal canine glucose curve on twice-daily insulin:

HourBG (mg/dL)BG (mmol/L)Comment
0 (pre-insulin)250-30013.9-16.7Peak of cycle
2200-25011.1-13.9Falling
4150-2008.3-11.1Approaching nadir
6 (typical nadir)100-1505.5-8.3Target range
8120-1806.7-10.0Rising back
10180-24010.0-13.3Returning to peak
12 (pre-next-dose)220-28012.2-15.6Ready for next dose

The shape is a gentle U with nadir in the target range and BG returning toward the upper end of acceptable before the next insulin dose.

The Three Numbers That Matter

1. Nadir (most important)

The lowest BG reading. Target: 100-150 mg/dL (5.5-8.3 mmol/L) at 4-8 hours post-insulin.

Standard adjustments by nadir:

Nadir (mg/dL)Nadir (mmol/L)Action
<80<4.4DECREASE dose 25%
80-1004.4-5.5Decrease 10%
100-1505.5-8.3NO CHANGE – target
150-2508.3-13.9Increase 10%
250-40013.9-22.2Increase 25% + check duration
>400>22.2Increase 25% + work up resistance

2. Duration of Action

How long does insulin keep BG below 250 mg/dL?

  • Caninsulin / Vetsulin typical duration: 8-12 hours
  • NPH typical duration: 6-10 hours
  • Detemir typical duration: 10-14 hours

If the curve shows good early response (low nadir at 4-6 hours) but BG climbs back above 250 well before the 12-hour mark, duration is short — switch to longer-acting insulin or three-times-daily dosing.

3. Pattern Recognition

Somogyi Rebound (hypoglycaemia → rebound hyperglycaemia)

Pattern: Low nadir (often <80) followed by sharp rise to high BG (often >300).

Why it happens: hypoglycaemia triggers counter-regulatory hormones (cortisol, glucagon, epinephrine, growth hormone) that drive BG up.

Treatment is counterintuitive: DECREASE insulin, don’t increase. Increasing makes the cycle worse.

Detection: 12-hour curve sometimes misses the dip; a 24-hour curve catches it better. Any stable diabetic that suddenly seems to need more insulin should be evaluated for Somogyi BEFORE the dose goes up.

Short Duration of Action

Pattern: Good nadir at 4-6 hours but BG climbing back to 300+ before the next insulin dose.

Solutions:

  • Switch to longer-acting insulin (detemir / Levemir)
  • Three-times-daily dosing (q8h)
  • Discuss long-acting analogues with your vet

Persistent Hyperglycaemia (no response)

Pattern: Nadir >250 mg/dL throughout the curve.

Causes:

  • Dose too low — increase 25%
  • Insulin resistance — must investigate:
  • Cushing’s disease (ACTH stim or LDDS)
  • Urinary tract infection (urinalysis + culture)
  • Diestrus / progesterone in intact females (consider spay)
  • Hypothyroidism
  • Acromegaly (rare in dogs)
  • Insulin storage / injection technique
  • Wrong syringe type (U40 vs U100 mismatch)

Hypoglycaemic Curve

Pattern: Nadir <60 mg/dL.

Action: Same-day vet contact. Decrease dose 25%. Watch for hypoglycaemia signs (weakness, ataxia, behavioural change, seizures, collapse). Have corn syrup ready for emergency oral glucose.

How To Perform A Curve At Home

The single best investment for diabetic dog management is home glucose monitoring. Equipment options:

Portable Glucose Meter

  • AlphaTRAK 2 or AlphaTRAK 3 — calibrated for dogs and cats, most accurate
  • Human meters work but read 10-20% lower (whole-blood vs plasma calibration)
  • Lancet device + lancets + test strips
  • Drop of capillary blood from ear margin, lip, or paw pad

Continuous Glucose Monitor

  • Freestyle Libre 2 or Libre 3 — used off-label in dogs
  • Small sensor adhered to flank shaved area
  • Reads continuously for ~14 days
  • App on phone or dedicated reader
  • Transforming diabetic management – specialist practices increasingly use it as standard
  • Cost: ~GBP 50 / USD 70 per sensor for 2 weeks

Protocol

  • Feed and inject as normal at hour 0
  • Test every 2 hours for 12 hours (or 24 hours if Somogyi suspected)
  • Record values + times
  • Compare to previous curves to track trend

When To Curve

StageFrequency
Just diagnosed / starting insulinWeekly for first month
Adjusting doseEvery 2-4 weeks
StableEvery 3 months
Clinical change (PU/PD returns, etc.)Repeat curve

Stress Hyperglycaemia – The Clinic Trap

A common pitfall: dog comes to clinic for BGC, becomes anxious, cortisol and epinephrine release elevate BG by 50-100 mg/dL. The curve looks bad. Insulin gets increased. The dog goes home and becomes hypoglycaemic.

Solutions:

  • Home curves when possible (less stressful environment)
  • Continuous glucose monitors (no repeated needles, multiple days of data)
  • Hospitalisation for full 12 hours if home curves aren’t possible (gives time to acclimatise)

Fructosamine – The Complement To Curves

Fructosamine reflects average glycaemic control over 2-3 weeks (canine equivalent of HbA1c). Targets in diabetic dogs:

Fructosamine (μmol/L)Control
<350Excellent (watch for hypoglycaemia)
350-450Good
450-550Moderate
>550Poor

Fructosamine does not replace the curve for dose adjustment — it confirms the trend. Use it when an accurate curve is impossible (very stressed dogs, complex schedules) or to verify response between curves.

Companion Calculator

For the specific dose adjustment based on nadir, use the PuppaDogs Insulin Dose Adjustment Calculator. It applies the nadir-driven rules above and gives the new dose to discuss with your vet.

Honest Caveats

  • A single curve does not capture day-to-day variability. Repeat curves catch the pattern.
  • Stress hyperglycaemia is real and common in clinic curves — home monitoring is preferable.
  • Glucose meter accuracy varies — AlphaTRAK 2/3 is the most accurate canine meter; some human meters under-read.
  • Insulin storage / injection technique problems can produce misleading curves — review with your vet if results don’t fit the clinical picture.
  • Somogyi rebound is often invoked but rigorously documented less often than suspected. A 24-hour curve before assuming Somogyi avoids false attributions.

Conclusion

The 12-hour blood glucose curve is the cornerstone of canine diabetes management. The nadir drives dose adjustment; duration tells you whether your insulin is lasting long enough; pattern recognition flags Somogyi rebound, short duration, and resistance. Home monitoring with a calibrated glucose meter or a continuous glucose monitor produces far more accurate curves than clinic-based testing. Combined with fructosamine for medium-term averaging, regular re-curves, and vet supervision of dose adjustments, this approach gives most diabetic dogs years of stable, well-controlled life.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a blood glucose curve for diabetic dogs?

A blood glucose curve (BGC) is a 12-hour series of blood glucose readings taken every 2 hours after insulin administration. It shows the SHAPE of insulin’s action: when BG starts to drop, the lowest point (nadir), how long the effect lasts (duration), and whether there is rebound hyperglycaemia. The curve drives every meaningful dose decision in diabetic dog management. Standard schedule: readings at hours 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, and 12.

What is a normal glucose nadir for diabetic dogs?

Target nadir is 100-150 mg/dL (5.5-8.3 mmol/L) at 4-8 hours post-insulin. Below 80 mg/dL (4.4 mmol/L) carries hypoglycaemia risk – decrease dose 25%. 80-100 is on the low side – decrease 10%. 150-250 is too high – increase 10%. Above 250 – increase 25% AND investigate causes of poor control (insulin resistance from Cushing’s, UTI, diestrus, storage problems).

What is Somogyi rebound in diabetic dogs?

Somogyi rebound is hypoglycaemia followed by counter-regulatory hormone surge (cortisol, glucagon, epinephrine, growth hormone) that drives BG sharply up. On a glucose curve it appears as low nadir followed by sharp rise to high BG. Treatment is counterintuitive – DECREASE insulin, not increase. Increasing insulin makes the cycle worse. Any stable diabetic that suddenly seems to need more insulin should be evaluated for Somogyi BEFORE the dose goes up.

Can I do a glucose curve on my dog at home?

Yes – home curves are often more accurate than clinic curves because they avoid stress hyperglycaemia (anxious dogs release cortisol and epinephrine which elevate BG by 50-100 mg/dL). Equipment: a veterinary-calibrated glucose meter (AlphaTRAK 2 or 3 is most accurate for dogs), lancet device, test strips. Feed and inject as normal at hour 0, test every 2 hours for 12 hours, record values. The Freestyle Libre continuous glucose monitor (used off-label in dogs) gives 14 days of continuous readings and is transforming canine diabetes management.

What does it mean if my diabetic dog’s insulin doesn’t last 12 hours?

This is called short duration of action – some dogs metabolise intermediate insulin (Caninsulin, NPH) too quickly. On the curve it appears as good early response (low nadir at 4-6 hours) but BG climbing back to 300+ before the next dose. Solutions: switch to longer-acting insulin like detemir (Levemir); try three-times-daily dosing (q8h); discuss long-acting analogues with your vet. Most dogs do well on twice-daily Caninsulin but a meaningful minority need a different approach.

How often should I do a glucose curve for my diabetic dog?

Weekly during the first month of starting insulin or adjusting dose. Every 2-4 weeks during ongoing adjustment phase. Every 3 months once stable. Repeat curve any time clinical signs return (increased thirst, increased urination, weight changes). Continuous glucose monitors transform this – one Freestyle Libre sensor gives 14 days of readings, far more data than any single curve.

Related PuppaDogs Calculators

Continue building your dog’s personalised care plan with these related PuppaDogs calculators:

  • Dog Pregnancy / Whelping Due-Date Calculator
  • Puppy Weight Predictor (Adult Weight Calculator)
  • Heatstroke Risk Calculator for Dogs
  • Bloat (GDV) Risk Calculator for Dogs
  • Dog Life Expectancy Calculator (Breed, Body Condition, Lifestyle)
  • Spay/Neuter Timing Calculator for Dogs (Breed-Specific)

References & Further Reading

The dosing ranges and safety information on this page are drawn from the following veterinary references. Always defer to your own veterinarian and the manufacturer’s label for your specific product.

  1. Behrend EN, Holford A, Lathan P, Rucinsky R, Schulman R. 2018 AAHA Diabetes Management Guidelines for Dogs and Cats. Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association.
  2. Niessen SJM et al. The big-picture review on canine diabetes management. Journal of Small Animal Practice.
  3. Feldman EC, Nelson RW. Canine and Feline Endocrinology, 4th ed. – blood glucose curve interpretation chapter.
  4. Fleeman LM, Rand JS. Management of canine diabetes. Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice, 2001.
  5. Reusch CE. Diabetes Mellitus in Dogs and Cats. In Ettinger SJ, Feldman EC, Cote E (eds). Textbook of Veterinary Internal Medicine, 8th ed.
  6. Plumb’s Veterinary Drug Handbook – insulin formulations and curve interpretation.
  7. PuppaDogs. Insulin Dose Adjustment Calculator and Water Intake & Polydipsia Calculator. puppadogs.com.
Suyash Dhoot
Suyash Dhoot
Tags: canine insulin nadirdiabetic dog BGCdog blood glucosedog glucose curveSomogyi rebound dog
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