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Dogs can predict epileptic seizures

These dogs can protect children from injuries, as well as helping kids deal with the daily struggle of their condition

Some dogs can predict when a child will have an epileptic seizure, a new study has revealed. These dogs not only protect their charges from injuries, such as falling, but also seem to help kids deal with the daily struggle of epilepsy.

Nine of the 60 dogs in the study (15 per cent) were able to predict a seizure by licking, whimpering, or standing next to the child. These dogs were remarkably accurate 鈥 they predicted 80 per cent of seizures, with no false reports.

However, those interested in owning a dog with these skills cannot yet just order one. The dogs were not trained, but instead began predicting seizures spontaneously within a month of moving in with their owners.

鈥淣o one is reliably training such dogs yet,鈥 says Adam Kirton, a neurologist at Alberta Children鈥檚 Hospital in Canada and lead author of the study. His group is looking into setting up a training program. However, some epilepsy patients do have already dogs that have been trained to protect them during a seizure.

Children with epilepsy are at risk of falling or choking during a seizure. The injury rate is highly variable, but can be about 20 per cent for some types of childhood epilepsy.

鈥淏ut the worst part of the disease isn鈥檛 a seizure, it鈥檚 fear of the next seizure,鈥 says Kirton. 鈥淏y knowing when a seizure might happen, it could liberate them and free them to do what they want to do.鈥

Minutes to hours

Before the new study, reports of dogs predicting seizures had only been anecdotal. So Kirton and colleagues attempted to systematically assess dog behaviour by sending questionnaires to families in their clinic.

Forty-two percent of the families with both an epileptic child and a dog said their dogs responded to seizures. And nine of these dogs actually anticipated the seizure, alerting families minutes to hours before the seizure occurred. Also, dog-owning families reported a higher quality of life than those without, with the owners of seizure-alerting dogs reporting the highest values.

One possible weakness of the study is that the behaviour was reported by the dog-owners themselves, who may overestimated their dog鈥檚 abilities. Kirton therefore plans to do another study in a more clinical setting, which will also try to determine how these dogs predict seizures.

At present, the mechanism is unknown. But some researchers speculate that the dog could be using subtle visual or olfactory cues that occur before a seizure.

Gregory Holmes, a neurologist at Dartmouth Medical School in New Hampshire, says the dogs could be detecting a change in smell. 鈥淧eople have autonomic changes, such as increased sweating, which a dog could pick up on.鈥

According to Douglas Nordli, director of the children鈥檚 epilepsy center at Children鈥檚 Memorial Hospital in Chicago, such external changes could result from a small electrical discharge that occurs in the brain before the full blown electrical seizure.

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