A woman named Breanna Bortner Si She noticed that her dog named Mochi was overly fixed on her right breast, often sniffing it and tagging it. It turned out that her pet was able to detect cancer rather than doctors. , due to his alertness, she managed to cure successfully.
Dog revealed the disease before doctors
Last year At that time 30-year-old Breanna began to feel very strange. She was still tired and discovered on her breast a strange pimple that resembled a bite from a mosquito, and later found out that it was a lump. Her concern confirmed her Mochi dog. It turned out that he began to roam much more, and he also noticed an unusual lump. Therefore, Breanna decided to seek medical care.
A few days later she received the results that shocked her. Doctors Diagnosed triple-negative invasive ductal cancer in stage 2b, which is considered a more aggressive type of breast cancer. The reason is that in the cells he has none of the three common receptors and does not respond to hormonal treatment that is usually used to combat this disease.
A young woman from making a diagnosis underwent 16 rounds of chemotherapy and double mastectomy. Nevertheless, she is grateful because she knows that her dog’s alertness has led to an early diagnosis that saved her life. “Really We underestimate how intelligent dogs are, just because they don’t talk and cannot communicate with us. But their actions obviously show us that they are aware of a lot, “Breanna said.
Mochi Not only did he help to detect her owner’s cancer, but it was accompanied by her during her exhausting treatment. “I was still crying and he didn’t like it. He was very worried about me,” Breanna said. Thanks to this help, a woman managed to get rid of cancer in a few months. Still She has to undergo examinations every three months to make sure her disease has not returned.
The unusual abilities of dogs are also confirmed by several studies. One research from 2019 indicated that Dogs that exalt blood can become the latest aid in detecting cancer. Thanks to its very sensitive smell, which is 10,000 times more accurate than human, have been able to choose dogs in the laboratory to select blood samples from cancer patients with an accuracy of 97 %.