Listen to Dr. Dog
When I’m traveling, I often scan the airline magazine. This past weekend, I found an intriguing article about dogs and disease.
A woman had an unexplained weight gain after she moved across country several years ago. She also had repeated UTIs, bladder infections, and abdominal pain unexplained by digestive issues. She was treated and seemed to recover, but her husky kept sniffing her abdomen. She tired of it and shooed the dog away, but the dog would hide in the back of a closet whimpering. When her abdominal pain came back, she put two and two together because of the dog’s actions and sought a further diagnosis. She was diagnosed with stage three ovarian cancer. It’s returned once and the dog acted the same way.
In another case, a women’s dog kept trying to bite the back of her calf. She finally looked at the area and found a dark spot. She had melanoma.
The ability of dogs to smell thousands of times better than we can seems to be related. Cancer releases proteins that dogs can smell. I’ve got more to research on this but for now, if your dog is trying to tell you something in some strange way, listen.
What are you prepared to do today?
Dr. Chet
Reference: Southwest Travel Magazine. 02-2020.