Canine Diabetes Management – The Practical Framework
Diabetes mellitus is one of the more common chronic diseases of dogs – approximately 1 in 200 to 1 in 500 dogs depending on breed and population studied. Once diagnosed, most dogs do well on twice-daily insulin with attentive monitoring – life expectancy from diagnosis is often 4-6 years, and quality of life is good when management is dialled in.
The framework of canine diabetes care:
- Twice-daily insulin (q12h) with feeding
- Consistent timing, consistent food, consistent activity
- Blood glucose curves every 2-4 weeks during dose-adjustment phase, then quarterly
- Fructosamine for medium-term averaging
- Clinical sign monitoring – PU/PD, body condition, energy
- Watch for hypoglycaemia – the more dangerous side of dose error
This calculator helps you and your vet interpret the glucose curve nadir and suggests appropriate dose adjustments, with strong safety warnings around hypoglycaemia.
Insulin Types Used In Dogs
| Insulin | Concentration | Action | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Caninsulin / Vetsulin | U40 | Intermediate (porcine lente) | Most common dog insulin globally |
| NPH / Humulin N | U100 | Intermediate (human) | Off-label, sometimes used |
| Detemir / Levemir | U100 | Long-acting analogue | Lower-dose-per-kg required (~0.1 IU/kg starting); higher precision needed |
| Glargine / Lantus | U100 | Long-acting | Rarely used in dogs – duration doesn’t suit canine pattern |
CRITICAL syringe-matching rule: Caninsulin (U40) needs U40 syringes. NPH and detemir (U100) need U100 syringes. Using the wrong syringe causes a 2.5× dosing error – a recognised serious adverse event.
Starting Dose
Most newly diagnosed diabetic dogs start at 0.25-0.5 IU/kg twice daily (q12h) with feeding. For a 20 kg dog, that’s 5-10 IU per injection. Start conservatively – hypoglycaemia from too much insulin is more dangerous than persistent hyperglycaemia from too little.
A first blood glucose curve should be done after 5-7 days on the starting dose – the lag accounts for stabilisation. The first curve drives the first adjustment.
The Glucose Curve
A blood glucose curve (BGC) is the gold standard for assessing insulin response:
- 12-hour curve with glucose checks every 1-2 hours
- Records the nadir (lowest point) and duration of action
- Performed at home (with owner training) or in clinic
- Home curves are often more accurate because they avoid stress hyperglycaemia at the clinic
The nadir is the key number for dose adjustment.
Nadir Targets and Adjustments
| Nadir | Unit conversion | Action |
|---|---|---|
| <80 mg/dL | <4.4 mmol/L | DECREASE dose 25% – hypoglycaemia risk |
| 80-100 mg/dL | 4.4-5.5 mmol/L | Decrease 10% – on the low side |
| 100-150 mg/dL | 5.5-8.3 mmol/L | NO CHANGE – target range |
| 150-250 mg/dL | 8.3-13.9 mmol/L | Increase 10% |
| 250-400 mg/dL | 13.9-22.2 mmol/L | Increase 25% + check duration |
| >400 mg/dL | >22.2 mmol/L | Increase 25% + investigate cause |
The calculator applies these rules and suggests the new dose – but only the vet authorises the change.
Fructosamine – The Medium-Term Average
Fructosamine reflects the average glycaemic control over 2-3 weeks (compared with HbA1c in humans, which gives 2-3 months). Useful between curves:
| Fructosamine (μmol/L) | Control |
|---|---|
| <350 | Excellent – watch for hypoglycaemia |
| 350-450 | Good |
| 450-550 | Moderate – room for improvement |
| >550 | Poor |
Fructosamine does not replace the curve for dose adjustment – it confirms the trend.
Common Reasons for Treatment Resistance
If a diabetic dog needs >1.5 IU/kg twice daily without good control, the cause is usually NOT just “needs more insulin” – it is usually one of:
1. Cushing’s Disease (Hyperadrenocorticism)
Very common diabetes comorbidity. Endogenous cortisol antagonises insulin. ACTH stimulation test or low-dose dexamethasone suppression test confirms. Treatment with trilostane (Vetoryl) often dramatically improves diabetic control.
2. Urinary Tract Infection
Very common in diabetic dogs because of glucosuria. Often subclinical. Urinalysis with culture confirms. Treatment frequently improves glycaemic control.
3. Diestrus / Progesterone Effect (Intact Females)
Progesterone antagonises insulin during diestrus. Recurring loss of control around heat cycles in an intact female diabetic is a strong argument for ovariohysterectomy.
4. Insulin Storage / Injection Technique Problems
- Insulin frozen → inactive
- Insulin stored above 25 °C → degraded
- Open vial used >60-90 days → reduced potency
- Caninsulin not rolled to mix → uneven suspension
- Injecting into scar tissue → inconsistent absorption
- Air bubbles in syringe → under-dosing
5. Somogyi Rebound
Hypoglycaemia → counter-regulatory hormone surge → rebound hyperglycaemia. A 24-hour curve catches this; sub-7-hour duration of action between doses also suggests it. Treatment: decrease, not increase, insulin dose.
6. Short Duration of Action
Some dogs metabolise insulin faster than expected. Switching to a longer-acting insulin (detemir) sometimes solves this.
7. Acromegaly (Rare)
Growth hormone excess – rare in dogs (more common in cats).
Hypoglycaemia – The Emergency To Prevent
Hypoglycaemia kills faster than hyperglycaemia. Signs:
- Weakness, wobbling, ataxia
- Behavioural change (confusion, restlessness)
- Drooling
- Tremors
- Seizures
- Collapse, coma
Emergency action:
- Corn syrup or honey rubbed on gums (do NOT pour into the mouth of a seizing or unconscious dog)
- Glucose absorbed through oral mucosa raises blood sugar within minutes
- Same-hour vet visit even if the dog wakes up
- Continue oral glucose every 15-20 minutes until at the vet
Every diabetic dog household should have corn syrup or oral glucose ready.
Home Monitoring – The Continuous Glucose Monitor Revolution
The Freestyle Libre (originally a human diabetes device) is being used off-label in dogs and is transforming diabetic management. A small sensor adhered to the dog’s flank reads continuously for ~14 days. Many specialist practices now use it routinely – the data quality is far better than spot checks or even curves.
Discuss with your vet whether your dog is a candidate. The sensor itself is relatively affordable; the reading device is one-time.
Diet, Exercise, And Consistency
Beyond insulin, the foundations of good control:
- Consistent feeding – same food, same amount, same time, twice daily with insulin
- Consistent exercise – irregular exercise destabilises control; regular daily walks help
- High-fibre / high-complex-carbohydrate veterinary diabetic diet (Hill’s w/d, Royal Canin Diabetic) – slower glucose absorption, more stable curves
- Weight management – obesity worsens insulin resistance; weight loss improves control
- Intact females → spay – removes the diestrus destabiliser
Honest Caveats
- Insulin adjustment must be vet-supervised. This calculator suggests a direction; the vet authorises the change. Hypoglycaemia from over-zealous adjustment is the leading cause of insulin-related death in dogs.
- Single-curve adjustments can be misleading. Stress, exercise, food changes all distort a single day’s curve. Repeat curves capture the pattern.
- The 0.25-0.5 IU/kg starting dose is typical but not universal – some breeds and individuals start lower or higher per institutional protocol.
- mg/dL vs mmol/L confusion is a real source of error. The calculator handles both, but always double-check which unit your meter reports.
- This is canine insulin guidance. Cats are completely different – feline diabetes uses different insulins (glargine, ProZinc) and different targets.
Conclusion
Canine diabetes is a chronic but well-managed disease in most dogs. The framework – twice-daily insulin, consistent feeding and activity, regular blood glucose curves and fructosamine, vigilant hypoglycaemia awareness – keeps most diabetic dogs well-controlled for years. This calculator helps interpret the curve nadir and suggests dose adjustments, while strongly emphasising the safety constraints: vet supervision, hypoglycaemia preparedness, and investigation of causes when control proves resistant. Used together with the PuppaDogs Vetoryl Dosage Calculator (for diabetic dogs with concurrent Cushing’s) and the Water Intake & Polydipsia Calculator (for monitoring PU/PD), it gives owners a practical management toolkit.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much insulin should I give my diabetic dog?
Starting dose for most newly diagnosed diabetic dogs is 0.25-0.5 IU/kg TWICE daily (q12h) with feeding – 5-10 IU per injection for a 20 kg dog. Start at the LOWER end – hypoglycaemia from too much insulin is more dangerous than persistent hyperglycaemia from too little. A blood glucose curve after 5-7 days drives the first adjustment. Caninsulin (the most common dog insulin) is U40 – use U40 syringes only.
What is a normal glucose nadir for diabetic dogs?
Target nadir on a 12-hour blood glucose curve is 100-150 mg/dL (5.5-8.3 mmol/L). 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.
How do I adjust my dog’s insulin dose?
Adjustment is based on the glucose curve NADIR (lowest point), not the highest or average reading. Standard adjustments: nadir <80 mg/dL decrease 25%; 80-100 decrease 10%; 100-150 NO change (target); 150-250 increase 10%; 250-400 increase 25%; >400 increase 25% AND investigate cause. ALWAYS confirm with your vet before changing the dose – hypoglycaemia from over-zealous adjustment is the leading cause of insulin-related death.
What is fructosamine in diabetic dogs?
Fructosamine reflects the AVERAGE glycaemic control over the past 2-3 weeks (vs HbA1c giving 2-3 months in humans). Targets: under 350 umol/L = excellent (watch hypoglycaemia); 350-450 = good; 450-550 = moderate; over 550 = poor. Fructosamine is useful between curves to confirm trend, but does NOT replace the curve for dose adjustment.
Why is my diabetic dog’s insulin not working?
Insulin resistance (needing more than 1.5 IU/kg twice daily) usually has an identifiable cause: Cushing’s disease (very common comorbidity – check with ACTH stim or low-dose dex suppression), urinary tract infection (very common in diabetics – urinalysis + culture), diestrus / progesterone effect in intact females (spay), insulin storage/injection problems, Somogyi rebound (hypoglycaemia followed by hyperglycaemia), short duration of action (try longer-acting insulin), or rarely acromegaly. Investigation with your vet typically identifies the cause.
What are signs of insulin overdose / hypoglycaemia in dogs?
Weakness, wobbling/ataxia, behavioural change (confusion, restlessness), drooling, tremors, seizures, collapse, coma. IMMEDIATE ACTION: rub corn syrup or honey on gums (do not pour into mouth of seizing/unconscious dog), then same-hour vet visit. Every diabetic dog household should have corn syrup or oral glucose ready. Hypoglycaemia kills faster than hyperglycaemia – this is the emergency to prevent.
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.
- 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.
- ACVIM Consensus Statement on Diabetes Mellitus in Dogs and Cats.
- Feldman EC, Nelson RW. Canine and Feline Endocrinology, 4th ed. Saunders Elsevier – canine diabetes chapter.
- Fleeman LM, Rand JS. Management of canine diabetes. Veterinary Clinics of North America – Small Animal Practice, 2001.
- Plumb’s Veterinary Drug Handbook – insulin formulations and canine dosing.
- Niessen SJM et al. The big-picture review on canine diabetes management. Journal of Small Animal Practice.
- PuppaDogs. Vetoryl Dosage Calculator and Water Intake & Polydipsia Calculator. puppadogs.com.















