Frontiers in Allergy (May 2024)

A canine model to evaluate the effect of exercise intensity and duration on olfactory detection limits: the running nose

  • Edgar Aviles-Rosa,
  • Jöerg Schultz,
  • Michele N. Maughan,
  • Jenna D. Gadberry,
  • Dana M. DiPasquale,
  • Brian Farr,
  • Andrea Henderson,
  • Eric Best,
  • Dakota R. Discepolo,
  • Dakota R. Discepolo,
  • Patricia Buckley,
  • Erin B. Perry,
  • Debra L. Zoran,
  • Nathaniel J. Hall

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/falgy.2024.1367669
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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Detection canines serve critical roles to support the military, homeland security and border protection. Some explosive detection tasks are physically demanding for dogs, and prior research suggests this can lead to a reduction in olfactory detection sensitivity. To further evaluate the effect of exercise intensity on olfactory sensitivity, we developed a novel olfactory paradigm that allowed us to measure olfactory detection thresholds while dogs exercised on a treadmill at two different exercise intensities. Dogs (n = 3) showed a decrement in olfactory detection for 1-bromooctane at 10−3 (v/v) dilutions and lower under greater exercise intensity. Dogs' hit rate for the lowest concentration dropped from 0.87 ± 0.04 when walking at low intensity to below 0.45 ± 0.06 when trotting at moderate intensity. This decline had an interaction with the duration of the session in moderate intensity exercise, whereby dogs performed near 100% detection in the first 10 min of the 8 km/h session, but showed 0% detection after 20 min. Hit rates for high odor concentrations (10−2) were relatively stable at both low (1 ± 0.00) and moderate (0.91 ± 0.04) exercise intensities. The paradigm and apparatus developed here may be useful to help further understand causes of operationally relevant olfactory detection threshold decline in dogs.

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