The dose of Caninsulin and the interval between injections has to be tailored to suit each individual diabetic dog.
Hypoglycaemia is a major concern. To help avoid hypoglycaemia:
This helps to avoid overdosing particularly during initial stabilisation.
In diabetic dogs the dose of Caninsulin can be given once daily or twice daily.
After calculation of the starting insulin dose, subsequent adjustments to establish the maintenance dose may be required. For more information see product leaflet or dose adjustment.
The once daily Caninsulin starting dose was established and confirmed in dogs, based primarily on clinical response. For guidance see the product leaflet. Remember to round the dog’s bodyweight down to the nearest whole kilogram and the calculated dose down to the nearest whole unit.
Many specialists recommend that intermediate acting insulins be administered twice daily to dogs.
Starting dose in the range of:
(Ref: Broussard JD, Wallace, MS. Insulin treatment of diabetes mellitus in the dog and cat. In Kirk's Current Veterinary Therapy XII Small Animal Practice. Bonagura J ed. Saunders, Philadelphia, 1995. p. 393-8.)
(Ref: Fleeman LM, Rand JS. (2001) Management of canine diabetes. Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice 31, 855-80.)
The starting insulin dose range is thus taken as:
| Blood glucose concentration | Starting insulin dose |
|---|---|
| <20mmol/l (360mg/dl) | 0.25IU/kg |
| >20mmol/l (360mg/dl) | 0.5IU/kg |

All animals should be weighed accurately before commencing treatment and at follow up visits