dogs and cancer
Like the old commercials for Fruit Loops, a Kelloggs' breakfast cereal, would say: "A nose, it always knows". While that commercial was referring to Toucan Sam, I'm just using this as a lead in to talk about how sensitive dog noses are and how they can be used, perhaps, to detect cancer.
There have been a number of mentions of this in the media recently. Here's two items from CBC news this year. One story that ran on 60 Minutes and another from the Early Show.
Both of these stories refer to a study run by Dr. Bob Gordon of the Scripts Clinic in La Jolla which used urine samples of cancer patients and healthy people to determine how well dogs could detect differences in odor between the two.
That study resulted in the conclusion that a trained dog could detect cancer to a degree that was 3 times greater than could be accounted for by mere chance. Pretty good but not great.
A much more interesting study has been just released:
In the small world of people who train dogs to sniff cancer, a little-known Northern California clinic has made a big claim: that it has trained five dogs -- three Labradors and two Portuguese water dogs -- to detect lung cancer in the breath of cancer sufferers with 99 percent accuracy.
Here's a "printer version" of that article from the NY Times that I excerpted above.
While this is still controversial and hasn't been confirmed, it would be an amazing advance. Dogs vary quite a bit in their ability to differentiate between odors so not all dogs could be trained to do this--but the ones that can could be quite a boon to detecting cancer in humans--and any other species as well.
<<-- Some of those nasty old cancer cells that dogs can smell.
There's been a huge body of evidence over the years that dogs can sniff out cancer but it's been anecdotal. Just a few people here and there that have had checkups because their dogs keep sniffing at a body part---usually women's breast--and calling attention to it.
These have certainly made people curious about how well dogs can detect the volatile compounds created by cancer cells but there's been no definitive study that confirmed this ability in dogs. Maybe this study by Michael McCulloch, research director for the Pine Street Foundation in Marin County, Calif will finally do it.
Comments
katie couric's ok- i don't see to much of her being a brit and living in turkey, but she's a bit too chirpy for my liking.... i like 'em a bit dour or i don't really trust them for some reason.
brockaw and all those square faced robotic lookibg surgery blokes also freak me out... i'm off to investigate and google news presnters in the uk and us and see if i can form an opinion!
its nice to be back. here via michele today*
Here from Michele's!
Here via Michele's. Have a great weekend!
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Visiting via Michele today. :)
Anyway, Mt. Trashmore is really nice now. They have built a great park with wooden forts, swings, bridges and all that great equipment for kids, have a picnic area, fly kites from the top and they built a skateboard park with ramps at one end. Around the lake are the ducks and geese... always. People still feed them even though they have signs posted prohibiting this. We live about a mile from there.
Here from Michele's.
Hi, Michele sent me :-)
Michele sent me today!
Michele sent me here.
Here today via Michele's!
rashbre
Michele sent me.
Hope you're having a great weekend!
Enjoy your weekend.
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we had that shown here in Australia a lil while ago now but no matter how many times they show it i still find it the most interesting thing!
Another interesting thing is that what Michele has created in her site has made so many ppl come visit so many other sites...!
i hope your weekend is just lovely! and keep up the great work Utenzi!!!
I had thought, or got in my head that the cancer or benign spot sniffing had had further substantiating than that. It makes intuitive sense to me that dogs could do this given how many particles/million they can detect, and that they already do search and indicate. let's hope it keeps developing into something clinically useful.
I'd read about these studies and I absolutely believe dogs are capable of much more than us humans can begin to understand, so I certainly feel they would be able to detect cancer.
Michele sent me!
Casper can sniff out poems waiting to be written, that counts as an advancement for humanity too, right?
Thanks for the info!
Michele sent me.
I really do hope they can train dogs to sniff out all sorts of diseases. I think they would be cheaper than all the lab work, cat scans, etc. that are used now.
Back again via Michele's. Hope you're having a great Sunday!