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Dogs Detect Parkinson's Disease 20 Years Before Symptoms Show
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Dogs Detect Parkinson's Disease 20 Years Before Symptoms Show

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Staying Well
Two trained dogs helped researchers find a new way to detect Parkinson's disease. The dogs can smell the illness on skin swabs 20 years before symptoms appear. This breakthrough could help our community get early treatment and slow the disease. Our community grows stronger when we learn together and share knowledge across neighborhoods.

Two dogs named Bumper and Peanut are helping us understand Parkinson's disease in a whole new way. These trained golden retriever and black labrador can smell the illness on skin swabs from people who don't even know they have it yet.

Researchers at the Universities of Bristol and Manchester tested the dogs in a careful study. Bumper found Parkinson's correctly 70% of the time, while Peanut got it right 80% of the time. Both dogs were over 90% accurate at ruling out healthy people. The nonprofit Medical Detection Dogs trained both animals for this important work.

This discovery matters because Parkinson's disease starts working in our bodies up to 20 years before we notice any symptoms. Right now, doctors can only diagnose the disease after symptoms become clear and persistent. By then, the illness has already progressed significantly in the brain.

Dogs have already proven they can detect other health conditions by smell, including bacteria that cause urinary infections, pneumonia, and some cancers. Their amazing sense of smell picks up chemical changes that happen in our bodies during illness.

This research could lead to simple, affordable tests that catch Parkinson's early. When we find diseases sooner, treatments work better and can slow down how fast the illness gets worse. The results were published in The Journal of Parkinson's Disease in July.

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