Rosie sniffed out the snacks in the training room before moving on to the odour of bowel cancer in her job as a Bio Detection Dog.
Fuelled by @RoyalCanin, Rosie uses her amazing nose to detect the smell of bowel cancer in urine.
We believe that information learned from Rosie and her colleagues about its odour could help deliver an accurate, rapid and non-invasive test for early diagnosis.
https://t.co/9K0yOp1IMU
๐ธMichael Leckie/PA Media Assignments
Bridget has been busy working on her general obedience and public access training peppered with lots of free running and nap time!
She's training to become a Medical Alert Assistance Dog and her nose will one day save and enhance a life by detecting a change in her client's odour which means a medical crisis is about to happen.
https://t.co/cl35BpztE6
Coal demonstrated the perfect 'sit' and head tilt in one fell swoop.
He's training to be a Medical Alert Assistance Dog and has recently been increasing his public access outings to busier places for longer as he gets more confident.
He's done town, shopping centres and supermarkets to name but a few places and handles them all like a pro.
https://t.co/cl35BpztE6
Winnie only started her training to become a Pseudomonas detection dog 2 weeks ago and already has 'the game' down pat.
Now her trainer, Mark, is teaching her a forward facing indication and encouraging her to hold it for a few seconds when she reaches the positive position.
https://t.co/9K0yOp1aXm
@cftrust@ImperialMed
Four new paws have entered the building - meet Hopper, our latest future lifesaver.
Chaos level: unconfirmed but expected to be high.
Adoration level: Confirmed and already off the scale.
https://t.co/9gUOke7WZf
New character unlocked...
Meet Connie, our newest pupstar in training.
The nose pose is perfect because it's her sense of smell that will be her super power and enable her to save a life.
Welcome to the MDD family Connie ๐ค
https://t.co/9gUOke8uON
Rosie sniffs for the odour of bowel cancer in urine samples in our training room, work that could help create a fast, accurate and non-invasive method of diagnosis.
We hope that one day, Rosie's work can be translated into clinical settings alongside existing diagnostic methods.
https://t.co/9K0yOp1IMU
๐ธMichael Leckie/PA Media Assignments @OpenUniversity
No wonder Kimi has an extra golden glow about him - he's passed all his assessments to become a Medical Alert Assistance Dog and is ready to be matched to his future client.
Kimi is a fun, friendly, lively boy who has a good mix of politeness and confidence. When you throw his amazing nose in too, he's the perfect recipe for a future lifesaver.
https://t.co/cl35BpyVOy
Despite all the sights, smells, sounds and frens at the beach, Kenny didn't miss Kate's odour change that meant she was about to collapse due to PoTS.
Thanks to his sandy nose, she was able to manage the episode, lying down calmly and safely. Kenny waited until she came round and gave him his reward and headed back to the waves ๐
https://t.co/cl35BpztE6
@UKPoTS@PostcodeLottery
"My health was getting worse and worse to a point where my world was so small. I was so isolated and everything that I'd ever loved had been taken away.
"Then Treble came along and from then on my life changed so much."
Thankyou to our client, Steph, for telling us about her partnership with her pet dog Treble, who has transformed how she lives with #PoTS.
https://t.co/cl35BpyVOy @UKPoTS
Pru was part of a team that taught us that dogs are able to detect ultra-low concentrations of #pseudomonas in bacteria grown in a nutrient liquid with a sensitivity of 94.2% and a specificity of 98.5%.
Now, she will be teaching us whether they can detect the odour in breath and sweat samples, which could lead to faster more accurate and less invasive diagnosis. She had a few refresher sessions on a training odour to remind her of the 'game' and quickly moved back into what she does best - detecting disease.
https://t.co/9K0yOp1IMU
@cftrust@imperialcollege
Zuri alerts Dawne when she's about to blackout due to #addisons disease. Zuri is Dawne's pet dog who we helped train to alert and her early warnings mean Dawne can take medication earlier and avoid sudden collapses and the injuries they cause.
When Dawne was hospitalised due to another health condition, there was only one medical expert she hoped to see during visiting hours and Zuri made herself right at home!
https://t.co/cl35BpztE6
Nic Nak's smiles says it all - she's having so much fun training to become a Medical Alert Assistance Dog.
She's currently working on heelwork, being settled on car journeys and playing appropriately with other dogs and her adventures are staring to take her further afield to new places.
https://t.co/cl35BpztE6
Winnie will have to put her tennis ball down for a bit as she's got a new job!
She is joining our world-leading Pseudomonas detection dog team and will help us assess the ability of our dogs to detect the odour of Pseudomonas bacteria in urine, breath and sweat samples.
https://t.co/nEXDf7UcRu
@imperialcollege@cftrust
Rosie had a successful training session learning the odour of bowel #Cancer in urine.
We're investigating whether dogs like Rosie could help deliver an accurate, non-invasive and more sensitive method of early-stage bowel cancer detection that could both increase uptake of the screening and improve health outcomes.
https://t.co/lB5DduQkcn @OpenUniversity
Please meet our newly accredited partnership, Harris and Phantom.
Phantom alerts Harris when heโs about faint due to PoTS and his alerts have enabled Harris to finish his university degree, work on his fitness and do a variety of voluntary work.
Harris says: โPhantom is the reason I am the person I am today. I am very thankful to Medical Detection Dogs and our trainers for supporting us through this journey, from my puppy full of potential I got as a pet, to fully accredited lifesaver."
https://t.co/cl35BpyVOy
We spotted an extremely rare creature in the wild - a stationary Drummer!
Medical Alert Assistance Dog in training, Drummer, is having a whale of a time in the early stages of learning to become a lifesaver. Free running and recall when he gets lots of treats and praise for being a good boy is his favourite module!
https://t.co/cl35BpztE6
Jasper, who came to us from @WoodgreenPets, is back in the training room as we kickstart our project to investigate whether dogs can detect the odour of the drug-resistant lung infection, Pseudomonas, in urine, breath and sweat samples.
Our previous project showed that dogs can detect the disease in saliva samples with a sensitivity of 94.2% and a specificity of 98.5%.
https://t.co/nEXDf7TF1W
@imperialcollege@cftrust
Dotty is so enthusiastic about her work to detect the odour of bowel cancer that we've had to put her on slo mo so you can see her super sniffing.
Luckily she has been trained to hold her stand and stare indication before she gets her reward so there is no doubt when she finds her target odour for her trainer or for us!
https://t.co/lB5DduQkcn @OpenUniversity
Beautiful Quella has got some exciting news - she's joining our Bio Detection team as a Pseudomonas detection dog!
Quella joined us from @guidedogs who recognised her excellent use of nose and will become one of a handful of dogs in the world that can detect the odour of the nasty lung infection.
We hope that the training of her and her colleagues could be used as the foundation for testing patient samples directly and faster, less intrusive diagnosis.
https://t.co/nEXDf7TF1W
@imperialcollege