A recent study examining the ability of cancer detection dogs to identify bladder cancer in the urine of other dogs suggests that this could be an effective new way to diagnose the disease in dogs. The results indicate that canine bladder cancer has a distinct smell which specially trained dogs can rapidly and non-invasively detect with up to 90% sensitivity and up to 95% specificity.
Dogs can detect canine urothelial carcinoma of the bladder
Dogs look out for one another.
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