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Dog Helps Man Manage PTSD Symptoms

ByKIM CAROLLO, ABC News Medical Unit
June 07, 2011, 7:40 PM

June 8, 2011— -- Haunted by the horrific memories of Vietnam combat brought on by post-traumatic stress disorder, confined to a wheelchair because of multiple sclerosis and racked by a blood disorder and breathing problems, 67-year-old Michael Gaither spent four years holed up in his Chiefland, Fla., home, leaving only for doctor appointments.

About three months ago, things got worse when he fell and broke four ribs. The agonizing pain and the thought of yet another disabling condition left Gaither wondering if life was still worth living.

"The doctors didn't think I was going to make it," said Gaither.

But all that changed when he found just the relief he needed: a 16-month-old German shepherd named Honey. Gaither's wife had contacted an organization called Guardian Angels Medical Service Dogs, which donated Honey to Gaither after meeting him.

Honey, he said, helps relieve the unbearable anxiety of PTSD as well as the frequent nightmares.

"When I get tense, she knows it, and she comes up and puts her head on my leg or my chest to comfort me, and I forget what I'm concerned about," said Gaither. "If I have nightmares, she'll jump on my chest and wake me up."

Honey also picks things up if Gaither drops them, and if he's inside and needs his wife when she's outside, Honey will go fetch her.

When his multiple sclerosis causes him to sweat profusely, while he's sleeping, Honey leaps into action.

"One night, I started sweating really bad and I had a blanket on, and Honey jumped up and pulled it off."

Gaither isn't the first person whose life has dramatically changed thanks to some four-legged alternative treatment. Dogs -- and other animals -- have made headlines for their ability to sniff out cancer and alert diabetic owners to changes in blood sugar levels.

But Honey and other service dogs have also been found to have the unique ability to sense changes in people's mental state and can be of tremendous service to the mentally ill.

A growing number of veterans are turning to dogs to help with PTSD symptoms, and experts say dogs can help with other psychiatric problems as well, including major depression and panic attacks.

"Dogs are very sensitive to escalations of mood. They can tell if a person's mood is starting to escalate to a panic attack," said Joan Esnayra, president and founder of the Psychiatric Service Dog Society. "They can tell their handlers this well in advance, before the handler has lost their composure and lost their ability to think clearly."

Dogs also help people with mental illnesses devote attention to the needs of the dog instead of solely on themselves.

"Dogs give them an alternate focus," said Esnayra. "Going out of the house, for example, is for the dog. That displacement frees up the brain a little bit and reduces anxiety."

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