Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Dogs can smell epileptic seizures

Scientists discover man's best friend sniff out odours on a patient's breath or sweat and warn them of an impending episode

- By Alexandra Thompson (© Daily Mail, London)

Dogs may be able to sniff out an impending epileptic seizure, research suggests.

A study claims man's best friend can sense an odour associated with seizures in humans.

When exposed to scents collected during an epilepsy episode, the trained pooches correctly identified those of a patient up to 100 per cent of the time.

Researcher­s hope this will lead to tests that enable patients to anticipate when a seizure is coming and seek a 'safe environmen­t'.

The research was carried out by The University of Rennes, France, and led by Dr Amélie Catala, from the laboratory of animal and human ethology.

More than 500,000 people in the UK - or one in every 100 - have epilepsy. The condition affects around 3.4million Americans.

Doctors have relied on smell to diagnose diseases as far back as Hippocrate­s in ancient Greece.

Recent studies have shown patients with lung cancer, liver disease and diabetes experience a change in the scent of their breaths. But no study had looked at epilepsy.

The scientists collected odours from five epileptic patients during a seizure, a 'calm activity' - such as drawing - and following exercise.

Breath samples were collected by having the patients exhale into a bag. They also had sweat wiped off their hands, foreheads and the back of their necks with cotton pads. These odours were then 'canned' and exposed to five dogs that have previously sniffed out cancer or diabetes.

Each dog smelt seven cans, with only one containing the 'seizure odour'. The experiment was then repeated nine times for each pooch.

Results - published in the journal Scientific Reports - reveal the animals correctly identified the ' seizure cans' between 67 and 100 per cent of the time.

And they could tell the control samples with 95-to-100 per cent accuracy.

The dogs also responded to the 'right' odour for longer than any of the control scents.

This demonstrat­es that despite seizures varying widely in their severity - and each of us having different body odours - epilepsy episodes are associated with a specific scent, according to the researcher­s.

They hope this will lead to tests that anticipate an impending seizure, either via 'e-noses' or trained dogs.

The scientists add, however, studies are required to determine the exact chemical makeup of seizure odours, as well as if the scent is present before an incident occurs.

A spokespers­on for Epilepsy Action said: 'We know dogs can predict seizures, which is why Support Dogs train them.

'We still don't know whether they do that by smell or some other sense.

' So this research is interestin­g and could be a next step in understand­ing how dogs can further support people living with uncontroll­ed epilepsy.'

 ??  ?? Man's best friend can sense an odour associated with seizures
Man's best friend can sense an odour associated with seizures

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