2014
DOI: 10.1136/vr.101950
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An epidemiological study of diabetes mellitus in dogs attending first opinion practice in the UK

Abstract: Objectives: To estimate the prevalence of canine diabetes mellitus (DM) in primarycare clinics in England, to identify risk factors associated with DM and to describe the survival of affected dogs.Methods: Cases of DM were identified within the electronic patient records of 89 small-animal practices. A nested case-control study identified risk factors for the diagnosis of DM using logistic regression models. Cox proportional hazards models were used to analyse variables associated with survival.Results: Four-h… Show more

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Cited by 89 publications
(143 citation statements)
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“…This study reports the estimated prevalence of diagnosis with canine hyperadrenocorticism in the UK as 0.28%, suggesting hyperadrenocorticism is the third most prevalent endocrinopathy of dogs behind hypothyroidism (0.87%) (Dixon et al, 1999) and diabetes mellitus (0.34%) (Mattin et al, 2014), although methodological differences between the various studies complicate direct prevalence comparisons. Despite several molecular studies that investigated its aetiopathogenesis, the exact cause of hyperadrenocorticism in most dogs remains unknown (Hanson et al, 2010, Kool et al, 2013, Teshima et al, 2009, van Rijn et al, 2010, van Wijk et al, 2014.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This study reports the estimated prevalence of diagnosis with canine hyperadrenocorticism in the UK as 0.28%, suggesting hyperadrenocorticism is the third most prevalent endocrinopathy of dogs behind hypothyroidism (0.87%) (Dixon et al, 1999) and diabetes mellitus (0.34%) (Mattin et al, 2014), although methodological differences between the various studies complicate direct prevalence comparisons. Despite several molecular studies that investigated its aetiopathogenesis, the exact cause of hyperadrenocorticism in most dogs remains unknown (Hanson et al, 2010, Kool et al, 2013, Teshima et al, 2009, van Rijn et al, 2010, van Wijk et al, 2014.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Despite several molecular studies that investigated its aetiopathogenesis, the exact cause of hyperadrenocorticism in most dogs remains unknown (Hanson et al, 2010, Kool et al, 2013, Teshima et al, 2009, van Rijn et al, 2010, van Wijk et al, 2014. Access to clinical health data on the large population of dogs in VetCompass offers the intriguing prospect of aetiological and epidemiological research across a range of disorders such as hyperadrenocorticism and of linking these with primary-care diagnosis and health management (Mattin et al, 2014, Kearsley-Fleet et al, 2012, Taylor-Brown et al, 2015, Mattin et al, 2015, O'Neill et al, 2013.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Analysis of this large data resource would allow DMVD prevalence to be estimated and major risk factors for the disease to be identified, as has been demonstrated for other disorders in companion animals 19, 20, 21…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Prevalence of cDM ranges between 0.0005-1.5%, depending on both geographical regions and breeds [171,173,174,[182][183][184][185][186], suggesting gene-environment interactions. However, most epidemiological studies have been performed in northern European and North American populations [173,174,182,184,185], with specific cultural and demographic characteristics.…”
Section: (1) Clinics Aetiology and Epidemiology Of Canine Diabetesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, most epidemiological studies have been performed in northern European and North American populations [173,174,182,184,185], with specific cultural and demographic characteristics. …”
Section: (1) Clinics Aetiology and Epidemiology Of Canine Diabetesmentioning
confidence: 99%