By
Suzanne Berry MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Job-related stress can affect a working dog's
health much like it does humans, but diagnosing problems in
an animal that cannot communicate feelings can make
treatment a challenge. Hurricane
Bob, an 8-year-old labrador retriever worked as an
arson-sniffing dog for the Jackson Fire Department until an
unknown illness began to take a serious toll on his health
last fall. Bob's
partner, arson Investigator Danny Benton, noticed that Bob
was lethargic and had no interest in food, was losing weight
and just wasn't himself. Bob's veterinarian in Jackson
diagnosed and treated him for a bacterial infection after a
thorough examination. Over the
next few days, the dog's condition did not improve enough to
suit his doctor, and he referred Bob to Mississippi State
University's College of Veterinary Medicine in
Starkville. MSU
veterinarians conducted a series of diagnostic procedures to
find out why Bob was not getting better even with his
antibiotics. They performed an endoscopy, which allows
visualization of hollow internal organs via a scope with a
fiber optic light source attached. This test revealed that
Hurricane Bob was suffering from stomach ulcers. "Dogs
can develop ulcers from tumors, aspirin, toxins and stress,"
said Dr. Buck Clark, an intern at MSU's College of
Veterinary Medicine who treated Bob during his illness. "I
think job-related stress is what caused Bob to get
sick." Hurricane
Bob underwent training by the Department by the Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms to learn how to sniff out
accelerants used in setting suspicious fires. The intense
training process takes five weeks, seven days a week and
uses food for motivation. Dogs trained with food instead of
toys tend to work harder for longer periods of
time. Bob was
given to the Jackson Fire Department by the ATF in 1995, and
has investigated more than 800 fires since he began his job
with the department. "Before
we had Bob on the job, investigating a fire took a lot of
time and extra work," said Jackson Fire Chief Norman
Presson. "Bob saved us time during an investigation. He was
a tool that made our job easier by detecting accelerants in
the burned out area. "Most of
the dogs trained and used by the ATF are former seeing eye
dogs, because they are already house-trained, good with
people and used to working," Presson said. Bob was a seeing
eye dog prior to his career as an arson-sniffing
dog. After
MSU veterinarians diagnosed Bob with stomach ulcers, he
received medication to protect and soothe the lining of his
stomach and began the long process of recovery from his
stress- induced illness. Bob officially retired from his
service with Jackson Fire Department at the end of the year
and will spend the rest of his life with Benton, his former
partner. Released:
Jan. 31, 2000
Animal
Health
Veterinarians
Intervene In Stress-Related Illness
Contact: Dr. Buck Clark, (662) 325-3432
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:34
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm00/000131bc.htm
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