[ad_1]
A devoted dog saved her owner’s life by scratching at her chest to alert her to a cancerous lump in her right breast.
Brenda Richards, 78, from Derby, has revealed how her Yorkshire Terrier Cleo, then seven, pawed at her as she tried to carry the pooch upstairs to bed as usual.
When Brenda went to investigate the area, she found a lump which medics then diagnosed as breast cancer.
She was given the all-clear after treatment and believes her cancer would have been missed if it wasn’t for clever Cleo.

Brenda Richards, 78, from Derby’s, Yorkshire Terrier Cleo, saved her owner’s life by scratching at her chest to alert her to a cancerous lump

The pooch pawed at a lump in her right breast which medics then diagnosed as breast cancer
She said: ‘She was trying to tell me something. Without a shadow of a doubt, my little doggie, Cleo, found the lump in my breast and saved my life.
‘I had no idea there was a lump there. If my little doggie hadn’t found it, I don’t think I would ever have known about it.
‘I dread to think what would have happened if Cleo hadn’t behaved the way she did.’
Loving Cleo is too small to climb the stairs, so retired home help worker Brenda usually carries her to bed.

She was given the all-clear after treatment and believes her cancer would have been missed if it wasn’t for clever Cleo

Brenda, a great-grandmother-of-three, was diagnosed by doctors at the Royal Derby Hospital where she’d previously volunteered for three years

She said: ‘I had no idea there was a lump there. If my little doggie hadn’t found it, I don’t think I would ever have known about it’
But in April 2019, the panicked pooch acted out and was instead struggling and wriggling to break free.
During the struggle, she clipped Brenda with her nails, alerting her to the deadly disease.
Brenda said: ‘She just did not want to be there. She was struggling and wriggling around in my arms and she has little legs and little claws. It was then I felt the lump.’
Brenda, a great-grandmother-of-three, was diagnosed by doctors at the Royal Derby Hospital where she’d previously volunteered for three years.
After eight months of treatment, including chemotherapy, radiotherapy and an on-going clinical trial, she was given the all-clear.
Brenda added: ‘I knew I was in safe hands. I knew all the nurses from when I volunteered at the very same hospital. I had seen how they treated people with my own eyes.

Loving Cleo is too small to climb the stairs, so retired home help worker Brenda usually carries her to bed

In April 2019, the panicked pooch acted out and was instead struggling and wriggling to break free
‘They were shocked to see me in there as a patient.
‘I would never have known that nine years later I would be back at the same hospital with the same nurses being diagnosed with breast cancer. The nurses were all amazing.
‘There was no messing about. My mammogram, biopsy and diagnosis all happened on the same day.
‘They gave me a choice to have a lumpectomy, a mammogram or do nothing so I opted for the lumpectomy.’

She said: ‘She was trying to tell me something. Without a shadow of a doubt, my little doggie, Cleo, found the lump in my breast and saved my life’

Brenda said: ‘She just did not want to be there. She was struggling and wriggling around in my arms and she has little legs and little claws. It was then I felt the lump’

After eight months of treatment, including chemotherapy, radiotherapy and an on-going clinical trial, she was given the all-clear
The minimally invasive procedure meant doctors removed the cancer and a small amount of the healthy surrounding tissue.
Brenda, who lives in Derby with husband of 60 years Mick, urged women to book their mammograms.
She said: ‘The sooner you go to get checked or diagnosed, the better.
‘In spite of my worries, when cancer actually happened to me, I breezed through it because my lump was found early.
‘Getting the all-clear in February 2020 felt fantastic. I needed to know the cancer had gone.
‘My dog Cleo, my baby, saved my life without a doubt.’

Brenda, who lives in Derby with husband of 60 years Mick, urged women to book their mammograms

She said: ‘My dog Cleo, my baby, saved my life without a doubt’
[ad_2]