News

Dogs really can be trained to smell Parkinson's disease, according to new research from the United Kingdom. In a double blind ...
Scientists find volatile compounds in ear wax may help detect Parkinson's disease earlier than traditional methods, offering a potential inexpensive screening tool.
A University of Bristol study shows that trained dogs can detect Parkinson's disease with 80% sensitivity by identifying ...
Dogs trained to detect Parkinson’s disease using scent have shown remarkable accuracy in new research. In a double-blind ...
New research shows dogs can detect Parkinson’s disease with striking accuracy by sniffing patients’ skin swabs. Learn how this breakthrough could help doctors diagnose earlier.
Trained dogs were able to detect Parkinson’s disease from skin swabs with up to 80% accuracy.   This method could lead to a ...
In the first paper, two dogs trained to distinguish sebum swabs from people with and without Parkinson's disease demonstrated sensitivity of up to 80% and specificity of up to 98%, reported Nicola ...
Dogs' noses are sensitive enough to track down fleeing convicts, locate human remains in hidden burial sites and detect ...
Find out how smart speakers may spot Parkinson’s disease early—keep reading for evidence, equity benefits and clinical ...
A study published in The Journal of Parkinson's Disease has demonstrated that dogs can be trained to detect Parkinson's disease by identifying the smell of sebum from skin swabs. Led by researchers ...
Currently, diagnosing Parkinson’s disease can be a challenging process. Clinicians rely on a combination of medical history analysis, physical examinations, and neurological assessments to ...
The study was published Oct. 17 in Intelligent Computing, a Science Partner Journal, in an article titled "Exploring Electroencephalography-Based Affective Analysis and Detection of Parkinson's ...