Decoding Dementia In Dogs Could Help Fight Alzheimer’s
Read more at https://www.vet.cornell.edu/news/20211213/decoding-dementia-dogs-could-help-fight-alzheimer-s
Written by Sherrie Negrea
By the time Carolyn Chow learned that her father had Alzheimer’s, he would only have five years before succumbing to the disorder in 2017 at the age of 86.
It was devastating to see her father, Joshua Chow, MBA ’64, deteriorate so quickly. “He was highly educated, brilliant and highly sociable, and Alzheimer’s took that all away,” said Chow, a staffing consultant for the Division of Human Resources at Cornell.
Chow is now supporting research into Alzheimer’s disease by bringing her dog Nora, a seven-year-old Chihuahua mix, to the Cornell Veterinary Biobank to contribute to the Dog Aging Project. The nationwide study is an essential part of a $5.1 million research project recently launched at Cornell University, the University of Washington and the University of Arizona to investigate the potential links between Alzheimer’s disease and a similar condition in dogs called canine cognitive dysfunction (CCD).
https://www.vet.cornell.edu/news/20211213/decoding-dementia-dogs-could-help-fight-alzheimer-s
Short URL: https://caninechronicle.com/?p=222862
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