Stress and cancer in dogs: Comparison between a population of dogs diagnosed with vancer and a control population - A pilot study

It is widely accepted that psychological stress and mental illness can compromise the function of the immune system. Clinical and epidemiological studies on humans recognized that specific psychosocial factors, such as stress, chronic depression and lack of social support are risk factors for the de...

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Main Authors: Simona Cannas, Greta Veronica Berteselli, Patrizia Piotti, Zita Talamonti, Elisabetta Scaglia, Damiano Stefanello, Michela Minero, Clara Palestrini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ss.Cyril and Methodius University, Skopje 2016-10-01
Series:Macedonian Veterinary Review
Subjects:
dog
Online Access:http://www.macvetrev.mk/2016-2/macvetrev-2016-0088.pdf
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spelling doaj-c4d4713951e64f999ddc1a95c1d1614a2020-11-25T01:38:40ZengSs.Cyril and Methodius University, SkopjeMacedonian Veterinary Review 1409-76211857-74152016-10-0139220120810.1515/macvetrev-2016-0088Stress and cancer in dogs: Comparison between a population of dogs diagnosed with vancer and a control population - A pilot studySimona Cannas0 Greta Veronica Berteselli1Patrizia Piotti2Zita Talamonti3Elisabetta Scaglia4Damiano Stefanello5Michela Minero6Clara Palestrini7Dipartimento Medicina Veterinaria (DIMEVET), Università degli Studi di Milano, Via Celoria 10, 20133 Milano, Italyvia Giotto 20, 20060 Masate, Milano, ItalyDepartment of Psychology, University of Portsmouth, King Henry Building, King Henry 1st Street, Portsmouth, PO1 2DY, UKDipartimento Medicina Veterinaria (DIMEVET), Università degli Studi di Milano, Via Celoria 10, 20133 Milano, ItalyDipartimento Medicina Veterinaria (DIMEVET), Università degli Studi di Milano, Via Celoria 10, 20133 Milano, ItalyDipartimento Medicina Veterinaria (DIMEVET), Università degli Studi di Milano, Via Celoria 10, 20133 Milano, ItalyDipartimento Medicina Veterinaria (DIMEVET), Università degli Studi di Milano, Via Celoria 10, 20133 Milano, ItalyDipartimento Medicina Veterinaria (DIMEVET), Università degli Studi di Milano, Via Celoria 10, 20133 Milano, ItalyIt is widely accepted that psychological stress and mental illness can compromise the function of the immune system. Clinical and epidemiological studies on humans recognized that specific psychosocial factors, such as stress, chronic depression and lack of social support are risk factors for the development and progression of cancer. Unfortunately, most of the animals studies on this subject are based on laboratory tests performed on mice. This retrospective cohort study aims to analyze the relation between stress and tumor in pet dogs, by evaluating and comparing the stress level in two groups of 69 dogs each, balanced for sex and age: the oncologic group consists of dogs diagnosed with cancer and the control group consists of healthy dogs. Our results show that, before the cancer diagnosis, more dogs in the oncologic group faced changes in their household and routine as opposed to the control group (p<0.05). More dogs of the oncologic group than the control group also showed signs of stress and anxiety, before the cancer diagnosis (p<0.05). As reported by their owners, these included attention seeking, hiding without a specific reason, following the owner around the house, hyper-vigilance, fear of fireworks and gunshots, biting, aggression towards other dogs, licking and chewing excessively parts of their body. Our results are aligned with the evidence from human research, indicating that dogs with cancer are significantly more likely to have shown signs of stress compared to the control dogs during their life.http://www.macvetrev.mk/2016-2/macvetrev-2016-0088.pdfdogstresstumorproblem behavior
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Simona Cannas
Greta Veronica Berteselli
Patrizia Piotti
Zita Talamonti
Elisabetta Scaglia
Damiano Stefanello
Michela Minero
Clara Palestrini
spellingShingle Simona Cannas
Greta Veronica Berteselli
Patrizia Piotti
Zita Talamonti
Elisabetta Scaglia
Damiano Stefanello
Michela Minero
Clara Palestrini
Stress and cancer in dogs: Comparison between a population of dogs diagnosed with vancer and a control population - A pilot study
Macedonian Veterinary Review
dog
stress
tumor
problem behavior
author_facet Simona Cannas
Greta Veronica Berteselli
Patrizia Piotti
Zita Talamonti
Elisabetta Scaglia
Damiano Stefanello
Michela Minero
Clara Palestrini
author_sort Simona Cannas
title Stress and cancer in dogs: Comparison between a population of dogs diagnosed with vancer and a control population - A pilot study
title_short Stress and cancer in dogs: Comparison between a population of dogs diagnosed with vancer and a control population - A pilot study
title_full Stress and cancer in dogs: Comparison between a population of dogs diagnosed with vancer and a control population - A pilot study
title_fullStr Stress and cancer in dogs: Comparison between a population of dogs diagnosed with vancer and a control population - A pilot study
title_full_unstemmed Stress and cancer in dogs: Comparison between a population of dogs diagnosed with vancer and a control population - A pilot study
title_sort stress and cancer in dogs: comparison between a population of dogs diagnosed with vancer and a control population - a pilot study
publisher Ss.Cyril and Methodius University, Skopje
series Macedonian Veterinary Review
issn 1409-7621
1857-7415
publishDate 2016-10-01
description It is widely accepted that psychological stress and mental illness can compromise the function of the immune system. Clinical and epidemiological studies on humans recognized that specific psychosocial factors, such as stress, chronic depression and lack of social support are risk factors for the development and progression of cancer. Unfortunately, most of the animals studies on this subject are based on laboratory tests performed on mice. This retrospective cohort study aims to analyze the relation between stress and tumor in pet dogs, by evaluating and comparing the stress level in two groups of 69 dogs each, balanced for sex and age: the oncologic group consists of dogs diagnosed with cancer and the control group consists of healthy dogs. Our results show that, before the cancer diagnosis, more dogs in the oncologic group faced changes in their household and routine as opposed to the control group (p<0.05). More dogs of the oncologic group than the control group also showed signs of stress and anxiety, before the cancer diagnosis (p<0.05). As reported by their owners, these included attention seeking, hiding without a specific reason, following the owner around the house, hyper-vigilance, fear of fireworks and gunshots, biting, aggression towards other dogs, licking and chewing excessively parts of their body. Our results are aligned with the evidence from human research, indicating that dogs with cancer are significantly more likely to have shown signs of stress compared to the control dogs during their life.
topic dog
stress
tumor
problem behavior
url http://www.macvetrev.mk/2016-2/macvetrev-2016-0088.pdf
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