Is
there a doctor — or dog — in the house?
Canine sense of smell could help diagnose disease
|

F.Birchman / MSNBC.com
|
|
By
Molly Masland, Health
Editor, MSNBC
Updated:
6:18 p.m. ET June 28, 2004
The next time your dog decides
to dive belly first into a pile of rotting fish or writhe in ecstasy
in another dog’s feces, keep in mind that this seemingly
horrifying urge could one day help save your life.
Dogs
have long been used to sniff out explosives and drugs, track
criminals and find missing children. Now, researchers are attempting
to harness the olfactory powers of canines for use in the field of
medicine.
Scientists
are training dogs in the hopes that they may one day be able to
reliably diagnose certain forms of cancer by smell, and help doctors
catch these diseases earlier than conventional diagnostic tools
currently allow.
Already dogs are used to warn of
epileptic seizures, low blood sugar and heart attacks, although
whether they are detecting changes in smell or physical behavior is
still unknown. And, while they may not be able to perform CPR or
operate a cardiac defibrillator (at least not yet), some canines do
know how to call 911.
'This isn't anything
magic'
Much of the research in this
area is based on the theory that disease causes subtle chemical
changes in the body or alterations in metabolism, which in turn
releases a different smell, or chemical marker.
“This isn’t anything magic,” says Dr. Larry Myers,
associate professor at the Auburn University College of Veterinary
Medicine in Auburn, Ala., who has personally tested the olfactory
capabilities of more than 4,000 dogs over the last two decades.
“Physicians have always used their own senses to determine the
presence or absence of disease.”
For instance, diabetes was once
diagnosed by the smell or taste of a patient’s urine. Certain
infections in burn victims can be detected by the smell of a
patient’s skin, and bad breath is often a sign of gum disease.
Recent
small-scale studies of dogs’ ability to detect the chemical
markers of cancer, specifically melanoma, have shown promising
results. The phenomenon was first briefly reported in 1989 in the
British journal The Lancet and, since then, preliminary evidence has
slowly been accumulating that suggests dogs may indeed be able to
differentiate between healthy skin cells and cancerous ones. A
sophisticated sense of smell
Work is also under way to determine whether dogs can accurately
diagnose prostate cancer. If the thought of a dog sniffing your
private parts sounds just a little too, well, weird, have no fear:
The dogs don’t actually smell men’s genitalia directly, they
sniff urine samples instead.
Part of what makes a dog's
sense of smell so sophisticated is its ability to smell multiple
layers of chemicals, says Myers. Dogs don't detect a single chemical
but a combination of them. "If (they were identifying) just a
single chemical, medicine might have picked up on it. The dog may be
doing something a little better," says Myers.
Surprisingly enough, no breed has a monopoly in the olfactory
department; most studies have involved a number of different kinds
of dogs. “There’s this mythology behind the bloodhound, but
I’ve tested a miniature poodle that had a sense of smell that was
as good as the bloodhound’s,” says Myers. “There’s enormous
variability within the breed and on an individual level.”
The
biggest challenge for scientists lies in designing experiments that
can accurately determine dogs’ success rate in detecting disease
and whether or not they perform better than existing diagnostic
methods. Implementing rigorous controls has been a major obstacle,
as has been finding adequate numbers of willing patients and
doctors.
Correctly training the dogs
themselves has also posed a difficulty for researchers. “You’re
asking the dog to discriminate something by smell without knowing
what the smell is,” says Dr. Jim Walker, director of the Sensory
Research Institute at Florida State University, whose research on
training dogs to detect melanoma will be published in Applied Animal
Behaviour Science.
While it’s unlikely a canine
will be joining the cast of ER anytime soon, researchers say if dogs
do turn out to possess an ability to accurately detect disease, they
could make a significant contribution to public health.
“It’s going to be very useful for large-scale screening
of populations,” says Myers. “And it’s certainly going to be
effective in third-world countries that don’t have the resources
to do sophisticated (laboratory) tests.” 'He's given me my
life' Dogs that diagnose cancer may be a ways away, but some
medical pooches are already on the job, warning their owners of
epileptic seizures, high blood pressure, heart attacks, migraines
and low blood sugar. Leigh
Meyer, of Huntersville, N.C., has suffered from severe epilepsy
since she was 17. Now 35, Meyer credits her ability to live
independently and take care of her four daughters to her seizure
alert dog Cyrano.
“He’s given me my life,”
says Meyer. “He’s offered me a chance to have a little bit of
normalcy.”
A
giant schnauzer who spends most of his time as a docile couch
potato, Cyrano’s mood changes abruptly about 30 minutes before the
onset of Meyer's seizures. Suddenly he becomes nervous and antsy,
and begins pawing at Meyer and leaning on her. This signal gives her
time to stop whatever she’s doing, move away from her children and
prepare.
Once the seizure starts, Cyrano
stands next to her until the episode is over, usually from two to
four minutes. Because Meyer’s seizures are often very violent —
she has broken several fingers, both collar bones and her feet
during convulsions — she relies on Cyrano to keep her children out
of the way. And, if a seizure occurs in a public location, she has
taught him to herd the children to prevent them from wandering off.
Little research has been
done to unravel the mystery behind dogs' ability to warn of a
seizure or other medical crisis, but most observers believe it is
based on canines' keen observational skills, sense of smell, or a
combination of both. "There
would have to be some type of chemical change or physiological
change in the body," says Sharon Hermansen, executive director
of Canine Seizure Assist Society of North Carolina, and Cyrano's
trainer. "People can't tell when (a seizure) is coming on, so
there's something the dogs are doing that we can't figure out."
Each pooch chooses its own signals
Whether a dog has been trained to predict seizures, heart
attacks or low blood sugar in diabetics, each animal develops its
own set of signals to warn its owner. Some will walk in front of a
person and refuse to move, others will knock their owner into a
chair, while some will simply freeze and stare.
And yes, dogs have even
been trained to call 911 on their own in the event of a medical
emergency. Given that most telephones aren't made for use by large
furry paws, trainers have had to use more dog-friendly devices, such
as step lights and pull cords, says Joan Bussard, founder of Amazing
Tails Inc., a service and alert dog training program based in
Oxford, Pa. The most
difficult part of training alert dogs is not teaching them to warn
of a medical crisis — they can either do this on their own or they
can't — but training owners to recognize their pet's signals, says
Bussard. "Sometimes
it's very clear and other times it's very subtle. You have to play a
guessing game," says Bussard. "When they learn to talk,
we'll be in good shape."
©
2004 MSNBC Interactive