The dog helps the owner detect cancer

Brenda Jones discovered she had breast cancer thanks to a loyal puppy.

Brenda Jones (47 years old) feels still fine, but her dog Murphy sees something wrong. Murphy behaved strangely a week before jumping up to scratch Brenda's left chest, making her extremely painful.

The next day, she went to check on where Murphy had scratched and was diagnosed with third-degree negative breast cancer, a rare type of cancer. Brenda immediately underwent emergency surgery and is currently undergoing chemotherapy. She believed that the five-year-old puppy saved his life.

Picture 1 of The dog helps the owner detect cancer
The dog Murphy saved Mrs. Brenda

Brenda recounted: "Unlike always, at that time, Murphy would jump into his lap, snuggle into my chest and stare at me. A week later, I was sitting on the sofa when Murphy jumped up and scratched his left breast. I was in great pain and seemed to feel the lump in. I thought Murphy could feel my tumor, if it didn't scratch me that day, I wouldn't have discovered my disease. '

According to scientists, dogs have a million times better sense of smell than humans. In the dog's brain there is a separate part for handling odors. Studies show that dogs can detect differences between normal cells and cancer cells.

Researchers hope to create an "electronic nose " to perform the same task, some organizations are conducting dog training to identify the urine odor of cancer patients. Discover whether cancer has a common odor, help diagnose cancer more quickly and accurately, save thousands of lives.