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Canine Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome


Posted on 22nd October, by Kevin Hanrahan in Dog Advocate. 17 Comments

Canine Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome

This isn’t my story but I thought it was really interested and wanted to share. It also mentioned our pal- Gabe the Hero Dog ! Canine Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome (PTSD) is a very real challenge we are facing with our four legged service members.

The dogs of war: saving lives but paying the price
Story by L.A. Shively

CAMP LEATHERNECK, Afghanistan – Can courage be measured in a canine heart? Can a dog actually be a hero?

Take Gabe for instance, a yellow Labrador Retriever who has three Army Commendation Medals and an Army Achievement Medal for finding explosives in Iraq. Actually, Gabe’s awards are not for finding weapons, ammunition, or bombs; but for saving lives.

How about Cairo, the Belgian Malinois that accompanied SEAL Team Six to Pakistan on the mission to kill Osama bin Laden? Cairo and the Navy SEALs were honored in a presidential ceremony marking the mission’s success – they got the bad guy.

603887 Canine Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome

U.S. Army Capt. SaraRose Knox, a veterinarian with the 401st Army Field Support Brigade Veterinary Services at Camp Leatherneck, Afghanistan, plays with one of her patients, Tory, brought to the clinic after seven days of not eating. Tory had ingested part of a blanket and Knox and fellow veterinarian, Maj. Dennis Bell, had to operate and remove the mass from her stomach and intestines. Until her infirmity, Tory was “outside the wire” searching for bombs with her Marine handler at various forward operating posts in Afghanistan.

If dogs can be heroes, can they also suffer the ravages of combat, just as humans do?

Allie, a friendly black Labrador Retriever trained to find roadside bombs, was injured in a mortar blast in Marjah, half-way through her third tour in Afghanistan. This was her second injury and included complications and infection from a field suture.

“It traumatized her, so she’s having trouble with loud noises,” said Maj. Dawn Brown, a Marine Corps reservist with the 3rd Civil Affairs Group out of Camp Pendleton, Calif. A civilian veterinarian, Brown works with livestock and large animals in Afghanistan while deployed.

“She startles and shuts down during a bomb blast or small arms fire,” Brown said, adding she believes Allie is suffering from combat-related stress.

Brown, a native of Bonsall, Calif., walked Allie occasionally while the dog was at Camp Leatherneck for several weeks before being sent for evaluation and reset training.

Keeping the dogs in the fight save lives explains John Kello, one of the field service representatives contracted to train and coordinate the Improvised Detection Dogs at Camp Leatherneck.

“The dogs take the threat away from the human being,” said Kello, who hails from Windsor, Va. “Nothing is more effective at finding IEDs. Plus it’s a morale boost,” he said, adding the dogs offer a small respite for the soldiers and Marines.

“Everybody out there is sacrificing their physical well being, their families. They give a lot and it takes a toll,” Kello said.

When the dogs get sick or wounded, they are medivac’d out of the battle zone – if transportation is available. An Army veterinarian picks the patients up at the flight line and rushes them to the veterinary clinic for treatment.

Army veterinarian teams in Regional Command Southwest, Helmand province, Afghanistan, included Maj. Dennis Bell and Capt. SaraRose Knox, both with the 401st Army Field Support Brigade Veterinary Services at Camp Leatherneck, Capt. Sean McPeck, with 436rd Medical Detachment Veterinary Service at Camp Dwyer, Afghanistan, and a veterinary clinic in Kabul, Afghanistan.

More than five percent of the nearly 650 military dogs currently deployed with American combat troops are developing a canine form of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, said Dr. Walter F. Burghardt Jr., chief of behavioral medicine at the Daniel E. Holland Military Working Dog Hospital at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio.

Though veterinarians recognize behavioral problems in animals, the concept of canine PTSD is fairly recent, Burghardt explained; coming on the heels of a greater number of dogs used in theater to find bombs and explosive material.

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Chance, a yellow Labrador Retriever trained to find hidden bombs and explosive material, eyes his handler warily. Now that Chance has a Kong dog toy, the dog’s prized possession, he won’t give it back without a fight â¤? a ‘play’ fight that is. Chance and his civilian handler, Chad O’Brien, spent part of an afternoon playing fetch in an large sandy area on Camp Leatherneck, Afghanistan, with the toy, part of an exercise program the handlers follow with their dogs between missions. Getting to put that toy in his mouth means victory for the dog and signals a job well done.

The Department of Defense considers improvised explosive devices to be the weapons of choice for terrorists in places like Afghanistan, an undeveloped country of mostly rural communities.

IEDs typically contain fertilizer and chemicals used in farming, with little or no metal making them nearly invisible to mine-sweeping apparatus – equipment that operates in a similar fashion as metal detectors.

Explosive detector dogs can sense odor concentrations as small as one to two parts per billion, too small to measure with current equipment according to an Air Force fact sheet on military working dogs. Labradors are used most often as they can smell 17 different odors associated with homemade explosives.

On patrol, the handler and dog team ranges ahead.

“When someone thinks there is something, the dog would go and check it out. We would have what we call confirms,” said Marine Cpl. Jared Charpentier, who spent several months in Sangin, Afghanistan, looking for IEDs with his partner, Gracie, a black Labrador Retriever.

“If she hit on something and there would be an IED – which happened a couple of times – we took care of it with (Explosive Ordnance Disposal). We didn’t miss anything, so I feel pretty good about the work that we did,” said Charpentier, a native of Moses Lake, Wash.

The corporal is glad he and Gracie have returned to Camp Leatherneck unscathed and that Gracie saved lives through their work together. Other dogs, like Allie, may not be able to continue hunting for bombs after they are injured.

“When a dog comes back with gunfire issues, we look at how she acts, how she reacts, where her tail is at and how she responds to commands,” said Chad O’Brien, a field service representative. “We have to see if they can deal with the gunfire and get back to work – that’s part of the game.”

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Maj. Dawn Brown, a Marine Corps reservist with the 3rd Civil Affairs Group at Camp Leatherneck, Afghanistan, plays with Allie, a black Labrador Retriever, employed to search for terrorists’ bombs and explosive materials. Though Allie had survived two mortar attacks during this third deployment, she was badly injured during the second assault and started running away from loud noises and gun fire. The Marines she was with decided it would not be safe for her, or those who were chasing her when she ran, to stay in the field, so they sent her back to Camp Leatherneck for decompression and eventual return stateside. Decompression at Camp Leatherneck requires lots of socialization, so Brown took Allie for walks and brought the dog to her office to be around other people. Once Allie returns to the U.S. she will go through retraining and revaluation for continued work finding bombs. If she cannot recover, she will be adopted out as a pet.

Different dogs exhibit different symptoms, but those symptoms are similar to indications of PTSD in a human. Some dogs become hyper-vigilant or overly aggressive, while others hide or shut down completely.

Although Allie still fetches her Kong toy and continues to sniff for explosive material on command, at the sound of gunfire at a nearby training range, her tail goes down and she becomes skittish.

When a dog stops hunting for hidden bombs and explosive material – running off to hide at the onset of gunfire or explosions – handlers end up chasing them, creating an unsafe situation in a combat zone.

“It’s not worth the risk if the Marines have to go find her,” O’Brien, a native of Burnham, Maine, said.

Allie was with the 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marines who deemed she was no longer fit for service in the field. She was returned to Camp Leatherneck for decompression and then sent back to Southern Pines, N.C. for reset training. Some dogs may return to Lackland for reset as well.

“Just like with a person, you bring them back and give them time to rest and recover and then re-expose them to that and see how they behave and react,” explained Bell.

Reset training involves desensitizing the dog to the loud booms of simulated mortar rounds and arms fire. There is a lot of emotion in each scenario too. But no matter the amount of training, the actual experience of being under fire cannot be reproduced.

“You can’t duplicate what goes on outside the wire,” O’Brien said. There’s no way – that energy; that fear; that excitement. We simulate, not duplicate [the experiences].”

Allie has three shots at recertifying and being returned to bomb sniffing in Afghanistan, O’Brien said. But for the most part, dogs sent out of theater do not come back into the battle space.

“If they can’t make it here on game day, they can’t do it,” O’Brien said. “You can’t train for the Super Bowl the day before.”

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17 comments on “Canine Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome

  1. Robert Brown on said:

    An article from the New York Times from December 2011 about canine PTSD and other affliction isn MWDs, and how they are being treated.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/02/us/more-military-dogs-show-signs-of-combat-stress.html?pagewanted=all

  2. Great Article, thank you for posting this. It breaks my heart & it’s something I haven’t realized.

    • Kevin Hanrahan on said:

      Thanks Lori. I think is really goes to show that these dogs really are fellow service members…..they feel what the two legged troops feel!

  3. Margaret Gargaro on said:

    Great article. Can those dogs who do not make the reset training be adopted out to families? If so, can you send me a link to an organziation that does that?

    Thank you for your articles. Keep up the great work on our Military Working Dogs.

  4. So glad to see that these dogs are getting the care they need to overcome the trauma
    and that those who cannot return to active duty are being placed in caring homes. Thanks for sharing this!

  5. Lynda Lawson on said:

    Heartbreaking, I hope it gets to a quiet home w/no kids, soft spoken older adults, and no other pets to compete with , and be spoiled, pampered forever…Send one here, I’d love to help. As Always , I thank you for your service, sacrifice and the burden both human and canine endure so we can be safe.

    • Kevin Hanrahan on said:

      Hi Lynda. I’m confident that these pups were placed in good homes.

      If you are interested in adopting a retired MWD then I recommend you submit an application. :-)

  6. Pingback: Homepage

  7. I’ve studied the subject of PTSD in dogs and written about it for my former blog at Psychology Today’s website. I’ve found that PTSD is actually much more common in pet dogs — especially rescue dogs and shelter dogs — than it is in military dogs.

    I recently set up an online resource for people who are dealing with this problem. Here’s a link to one of my articles on the subject.

    Canine PTSD: Its Signs, Symptoms & Treatment

    Thanks! And keep up the good work!

  8. Kevin Hanrahan on said:

    Hi Lee. This is a a great link. Thanks for sharing it and your insight!

  9. Homeopathy can be very effective in PTS treatment, dogs and people. Can go back to root causation. But you need a good Classical Homeopath to prescribe the correct remedy for the individual.

    Lee’s comment above about pet dogs/rescue and shelter dogs tending to PTS more commonly that military dogs is very interesting & makes sense to me.

    I wonder if military dogs are able to tolerate stress better /deal with the trauma better than pets because of the very intense bond between soldier handler and soldier dog. The dog knows he/she is supported and trusts his/her handler totally.

    Pets/rescue and shelter dogs may not have the support of a person they trust or be able to socialize with canine buddies so are isolated – even worse than for people this emotional isolation lowers tolerance of stress/pretty much everything.

  10. Megan on said:

    Great article Kevin! Do you know of any research using bilateral stimulation/EMDR to treat PTSD in Veteran dogs? I know many EMDR proponents that report success, but it is mostly anecdotal evidence.

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