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McClatchy Washington Bureau
McClatchy Washington Bureau
World
Julia Marnin

COVID-sniffing dogs can also smell long-term virus symptoms in patients, study says

While researchers already discovered a trained dog’s nose can identify COVID-19 with its scent-detecting capabilities, dogs have now demonstrated they can also sniff out long-term virus symptoms — often called “long COVID” — in patients, researchers in Germany found.

Dogs are “superior smellers” and are already used to detect what the human nose typically cannot from diseases, such as Parkinson’s, cancer and diabetes, to drugs and explosives in public places, according to the American Lung Association.

In a pilot study, scientists discovered the dogs that had been trained to detect COVID-19 in their prior research could identify long COVID patient samples with a “high sensitivity,” according to the work published June 16 in Frontiers in Medicine.

“These results suggest that the disease-specific odor of acute COVID-19 is still present in the majority of Long COVID samples,” study authors from the University of Veterinary Medicine in Hanover, Germany wrote.

Long COVID symptoms can linger for weeks, or even years, after an infection with “new, returning or ongoing health problems,” according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. They may be identified weeks after first testing positive for the coronavirus and symptoms can include fatigue, breathing troubles, heart palpitations, brain fog and more.

In the study, the team of German researchers had nine dogs dip their noses into scent holes containing samples of long COVID patient saliva as well as COVID-19 positive and negative patient samples of saliva, urine and sweat for comparison during two test scenarios.

Out of 732 samples presented to the dogs overall, they showed an average sensitivity of more than 85% to long COVID in both scenarios, the research found. The dogs could more accurately detect long COVID samples when presented next to negative COVID-19 samples (a 94% sensitivity) compared to long COVID samples presented next to positive virus samples (with a 86% sensitivity).

Dogs pick up on ‘disease specific’ odors

“Dog odor detection is far better than the general public can imagine,” study co-author Dr. Esther Schalke, said in a statement regarding one of the team’s prior studies published in 2020, McClatchy News previously reported.

“We were amazed at how quickly our dogs could be trained to recognize samples from SARS-CoV-2 infected individuals,” Schalke added.

The team has been training their dogs to detect COVID-19 in multiple studies since April 2020.

Dogs’ noses have about 300 million scent receptors and are much more sensitive to smells compared to humans, who have roughly 5 or 6 million scent receptors, according to the American Lung Association.

In the authors’ most recent study, the nine dogs, with names such as Bella, Erec and Lotta, correctly identified 92.86% of long COVID samples as COVID-19 positive when long COVID samples were presented next to negative virus samples (scenario 2).

In comparison, when the dogs sniffed out long COVID samples next to positive COVID-19 samples, they identified just 3.96% of long COVID samples as positive virus samples (scenario 1), according to the research.

Study authors explained that this likely indicates the “disease-specific odor” of COVID-19 was still detectable by the dogs in long COVID samples, “but probably not to the same extent as in samples” of current COVID-19 positive patients.

Disease-specific odors are “composed of a unique pattern of volatile organic compounds” that are “produced by cell metabolism and released with breath, urine, saliva, blood, sweat and other body fluids,” scientists wrote.

Ultimately, they concluded that their study’s results support the hypothesis that lingering symptoms of COVID-19 can last for months following initial infection.

“The study should be regarded as a pilot study due to inclusion of a limited number of patients,” authors noted. “Further research with more patients and samples acquired from the same patient at different time points is needed, to evaluate to what extent the sensitivity of medical detection dogs may vary throughout the course of the infection.”

Dogs are currently being used to sniff out COVID-19 in a Massachusetts school district, CNN reported.

More on long COVID

Roughly 1 in 5 adults are at risk of developing at least one long COVID symptom after testing positive for the virus, according to CDC research published McClatchy News previously reported.

The most common long COVID conditions in all adults the agency studied were identified as “respiratory symptoms and musculoskeletal pain.”

As the omicron variant, and its subvariants, are estimated to make up all virus cases in the U.S., another study found that long COVID may be less likely after an omicron infection compared to a delta variant infection, McClatchy News reported.

However, risk still remains because omicron is highly infectious.

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