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    Home Advertisers CSU helps save life of dog who rescues others
    CSU helps save life of dog who rescues others
    Pets
    June 4, 2010

    CSU helps save life of dog who rescues others

    By SARAH JANE KYLE The Coloradoan

    FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) — A world-renowned hero paid a visit to
    CSU’s Veterinary Teaching Hospital on May 20.

    Looking at the exuberant 11-year-old border collie, no one would
    suspect she was in for her six-month checkup after having surgery
    last November for cancer.

    Sage and her owner, Diane Whetsel, have worked together since
    Sage was 10 months old, training to become one of the nation’s top
    search-and-rescue dogs. Sage was first deployed during the attacks
    on Sept. 11, 2001, tasked with recovering the body of the
    terrorists who attacked the Pentagon. She was successful and since
    has worked on the Natalie Holloway case in Aruba, helped track down
    missing soldiers in Iraq and worked on several missing person and
    homicide cases with police departments across the nation.

    As a result of her Sept. 11 work, Sage was enrolled in a canine
    health study conducted by the University of Pennsylvania, to
    determine the risk and effects of search and rescue on dogs that
    work in environments such as Ground Zero.

    Each year, Whetsel routinely sends a blood sample and chest
    X-rays to the University of Pennsylvania. The tests went without
    alarm until last fall when Whetsel was contacted by her
    veterinarian.

    “There was something in her lungs, a mass of some sort,” Whetsel
    said. “They said it could be one of two, and their guess was either
    a thymoma or a lymphoma.”

    Had it not been for the study, Whetsel said the masses might
    never have been found.

    “She was never symptomatic,” Whetsel said. “Had it not been for
    the 9/11 study they were doing at the University of Pennsylvania,
    we may not have detected it until she was symptomatic and the
    prognosis may have been different.”

    After speaking to multiple doctors about Sage’s condition,
    Whetsel decided to bring the canine hero to Colorado State
    University for treatment from their home in Roswell, N.M.

    “Colorado State was the gold standard,” Whetsel said. “Everybody
    said where she needs to go is Colorado State. This is apparently
    the best, and all the doctors agreed to it.”

    Sage underwent surgery in November to remove the masses from her
    chest and returned to CSU recently for a six-month checkup with
    Janet Lori, a veterinarian at the hospital. Lori and her team
    performed a CT scan May 19 to check for additional masses.

    While Lori said there is a small spot on the scan, she said the
    team was not certain whether it was an indication of another mass
    or simply reactive tissue from Sage’s surgery in November.

    “At this point, we’re going to keep an eye on Sage and how she’s
    doing,” Lori said. “As far as what her long-term prognosis is, we
    are guardedly optimistic that her prognosis is good.”

    Sage has always been a light to those around her, particularly
    the soldiers she worked with in Iraq.

    “We’d go eight or 10 miles a day and come back to the camp; and
    as soon as she’d take some water and lay down for five minutes,
    she’d have a Frisbee in her mouth,” Whetsel said. “She would always
    bring a smile to the soldiers’ faces.”

    Sage stands out as the atypical employee: She truly loves her
    job. Whetsel attributes her excitement to the motivational style of
    training most rescue dogs enter.

    “A dog that is trained motivationally likes the job. They want
    to do it,” Whetsel said. “The reward for her is actually the job
    itself, not that she’s going to get to the end of it. She loves the
    job.”

    Alongside the discomfort of Sage’s profession lies danger.
    Search-and-rescue dogs are routinely exposed to hazardous
    environments and materials, paving the way for multiple health
    problems. However, Whetsel said, despite their hero status, many
    dogs often never receive the care they need or deserve.

    “These dogs have no support once they’re done working. In her
    case (Sage’s), she belongs to me, so it’s up to me to take care of
    her,” Whetsel said. “If the dog is injured in the military, local
    police or state police, the business office decides what they’re
    going to do for these dogs. Lots of times, if there is an expensive
    treatment needed, they just retire them and that leaves their fate
    uncertain.”

    Because of this dilemma, Whetsel started the Sage Foundation for
    Dogs to help provide funding for injured or ill K-9 dogs.

    “I want to make sure that all of our hero dogs in this country
    are taken care of the best they can and that they get the treatment
    they need,” Whetsel said. “And that their treatment’s not decided
    by some business office.”

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