|
Dogs Could Be a Diabetic's Best
Friend
New York -
Irish researchers hope to prove that a dog's keen sense of smell
gives it the ability to watch over the blood sugar levels of
diabetics.
Canines have already shown
themselves capable of leading the blind, alerting the deaf, and
helping the physically disabled with daily tasks.
But researchers at Queen's
University in Belfast, Northern Ireland, are taking the "helpful
companion" idea one step further by gathering scientific evidence
that could verify dogs can reliably detect dangerous blood sugar
level drops in diabetics.
"Anecdotal reports suggest that
some dogs can perform early warning of hypoglycemia by using their
sense of smell to 'sniff out' if their owner's blood sugar levels
are dropping," said lead researcher and psychology professor Deborah
Wells.
More than 20 million U.S. children
and adults have diabetes, according to the American Diabetes
Association. Those with the disease do not produce enough insulin, a
hormone the body needs to convert sugars, starches and other food
into energy.
Diabetics must test their blood
glucose level regularly, even sometimes in the middle of the night
to avoid the peaks and valleys that can cause organ failure, say
experts.
Wells hopes to find out what cues
dogs pick up on so they can officially be recognized and trained as
early-warning systems for diabetics.
At least two organizations in the
United States already train dogs to detect low glucose levels. But
exactly what the canines notice when a person experiences a blood
sugar low is still a mystery, said Mark Ruefenacht, founder of Dogs
for Diabetics, in Concord, Calif.
The organization is working with a
forensic laboratory to identify a possible odor.
"We just haven't come up with the
right answers," he said. "Every time we think we have the answer, we
find that we don't."
Ruefenacht, a diabetic, started the
organization three years ago, inspired after a puppy he was raising
for Guide Dogs for the Blind woke him one night. Ruefenacht forgot
to check his blood sugar before going to sleep, and he thinks he had
a seizure that alarmed the pup.
Since then, the all-volunteer group
has placed 30 trained canines in the homes of Northern California
residents with type 1 diabetes.
Demand for the dogs is high; more
than 100 people are on the waiting list.
Dogs for Diabetics uses Labrador
retrievers that don't graduate from guide dog school. These dogs
usually flunk for reasons such as refusing to walk in the rain or
step onto an escalator -- all skills important for being a working
dog, but not a general assistance one.
Ruefenacht said his dogs undergo
three to four months of training similar to what is used to prepare
dog to detect narcotics or explosives. The 2-year-old canines are
first taught to detect scent samples of low blood sugar. Then they
learn to find that scent on people, and alert others by holding in
their mouth a soft tube that hangs from around their neck.
Dogs that successfully complete
training are 90 percent accurate, Ruefenacht said.
These clever canines aren't the
only ones that must learn new tricks.
Mary Simon has battled diabetes for
more than three decades, and she now drives four hours each week
from her home in Fresno to attend the required class.
"I need this dog desperately," said
Simon, a diabetic who is also medical director for the Diabetic
Youth Foundation in Concord, Calif.
Medication she takes hampers her
ability to feel nighttime lows, she said, and the special glucose
sensor she wears doesn't always work.
When Simon first learned of the
hypoglycemic detection dogs a few years ago, she didn't think their
talent was needed because glucose sensors were about to hit the
market. Since then, she's changed her mind.
"My own personal experience is we
need [the dogs] right now," she said.
Not everyone is so quick to put
their trust in the canines' ability.
Larry Myers, a veterinarian and
professor at Auburn University in Alabama, has trained dogs to
detect everything from drugs to agricultural pests for 25 years. He
said the jury is still out on whether dogs can truly detect low
blood sugar levels, but he believes it's a possibility worth
exploring.
Even though dogs have amazing
olfactory abilities, he said they are not universally sensitive to
all chemicals.
"Do hypoglycemic individuals, in
fact, emit an odor that is characteristic? I don't know, and I don't
think anybody does know right now," he said.
A possibility other than scent is
the dogs are picking up on visual cues, which is thought to be the
case with seizure detection dogs. Such dogs allegedly can pick up on
extremely subtle physiological changes in their human companion that
may begin five to 45 minutes before an actual attack. The dogs then
warn the humans so they can find a safe environment or take
precautionary measures.
"It turns out what the dogs are
really sensitive to is subtle changes in behavior of the individuals
just prior to seizing," Myers said. "It's more of a fact that dogs
are very, very, very observant of human behavior." --
HealthDay
Click
Here To Have Your Say On This Story
Brudirect.com News
|