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Dogs Can Differentiate Between People With Parkinson Disease, Controls

High sensitivity and specificity seen with two dogs undergoing 38 to 53 weeks of training on 205 samples

By Elana Gotkine HealthDay Reporter

FRIDAY, July 18, 2025 (HealthDay News) — Dogs can differentiate between dry skin swab samples from people with Parkinson disease (PwP) and controls, according to a study published online July 14 in the Journal of Parkinson’s Disease.

Nicola Rooney, Ph.D., from the Bristol Veterinary School in the United Kingdom, and colleagues trained two dogs to distinguish between dry skin swabs obtained from PwP and controls. After 38 to 53 weeks of training on 205 samples, the dogs were tested in a double-blind trial using samples from 60 controls and 40 drug-naive PwP.

The researchers found that the dogs differentiated between PwP and control samples that they had not previously encountered with both high sensitivity (70 and 80 percent) and specificity (90 and 98 percent). For positive samples, agreement between the two dogs was higher than expected by chance.

“Identifying diagnostic biomarkers of PD, particularly those that may predict development or help diagnose disease earlier is the subject of much ongoing research,” Rooney said in a statement. “The dogs in this study achieved high sensitivity and specificity and showed there is an olfactory signature distinct to patients with the disease.”


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