February 23rd, 2010

Ricochet’s Story: Finding the Right Purpose

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Ricochet was born into a program that trained service dogs. She was great at learning to turn on lights, open doors, pull down zippers, and so on.

But there was a problem … one that ultimately led through sadness, to a new, joyful direction for Richochet’s life.

January 5th, 2010

Dog Saves Boy From Cougar

Mailbox cover from Dogstuff

Mailbox cover from Dogstuff

Happy 2010, Dogfolk! In case you missed this story, an 11-year-old boy in British Columbia is thankful for his Golden Retriever, Angel, who saved him from a cougar in his own back yard.

CBC News has the details.

November 3rd, 2009

Pampered Pups in Manhattan

Sign from Dogstuff

Sign from Dogstuff

What do city dogs do for fun? Jill Abramson and her retriever puppy, Scout, find heated pools, doggy day camps, and other services for canny canines and their humans.

September 3rd, 2009

Remembering Maggie

Card from Dogstuff

Card from Dogstuff

A woman shares fond reminiscences of a special Golden Retriever who touched the lives of all she met.

March 24th, 2009

Canine Trials Test Potential Cancer Treatments for People

Dogs who develop cancer are increasingly being given experimental drugs and other treatments that may someday benefit humans.

Like Oscar, a bichon frise with anal sac adenocarcinoma and a poor prognosis. Instead of having Oscar put down, his vet contacted a research center, which shipped out a new drug to try.

Gift bag from Dogstuff

Gift bag from Dogstuff

There are several reasons why it makes sense to offer cancer treatments to dogs. The mice that are usually used in cancer treatments are bred to develop tumors (ugh). But dogs, like people, develop tumors spontaneously.

Also, treatments that are highly effective in mice — 80 percent or better — may only be 10 to 15 percent effective in humans. Dogs are more genetically similar to humans than mice are. What’s more, they’re exposed to the same environmental factors. So there’s hope that treatments that work well in dogs will be more helpful to humans.

Handpainted figure from Dogstuff

Handpainted figure from Dogstuff

The dogs benefit too. Most of the drugs and therapies used to treat them were developed in the 1950s. But now, they are receiving cutting-edge treatments in cases where there would otherwise be no hope. The potential is so good that the U.S. National Cancer Institute has established the Comparative Oncology Program to evaluate chemotherapy drugs in dogs.

Needlepoint pillow from Dogstuff

Needlepoint pillow from Dogstuff

Two other dogs — Haley, a giant schnauzer, and Buddy, a golden retriever — were treated with the same drug given to Oscar. Buddy’s tumor shrank 40 percent, and Haley’s 77 percent. There’s now a trial underway with 10 dogs.

And Oscar? Five years later, he’s still going strong.

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