Author Topic: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping  (Read 1359 times)

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Offline Confederate Kahanist

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Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« on: March 25, 2010, 06:32:26 PM »
http://www.wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=131533



Do implanted microchips cause cancer in dogs and cats?

That's the question owners are asking after highly aggressive tumors developed around the microchip implants of two dogs, killing one and leaving the other terminally ill.

The owners – and pathology and autopsy reports – suggest a link between the chips and formation of fast-growing cancers.

'I could see it taking his life'

A 5-year-old bullmastiff named Seamus died last month after developing a hemangio-sarcoma – a malignant form of cancer that can kill even humans in three to six months, explains privacy expert, syndicated radio host and best-selling author Dr. Katherine Albrecht.

Albrecht, an outspoken opponent of implantable microchips, has been contacted by pet owners after their animals experienced what they believe to be side effects from the procedure.

According to a pathology report, Seamus' tumor appeared between his shoulder blades last year, and by September a "large mass" had grown with the potential to spread to his lungs, liver and spleen.

Seamus underwent emergency surgery, and doctors extracted a 4-pound, 3-ounce tumor from the dog. They used four drains to remove fluid from the area in which the tumor had developed. The veterinarian informed the dog's owner, Howard Gillis, that there had been two microchips embedded in Seamus – one presumably inserted by the dog's breeder when Seamus was only 9 months old. The chips were both located in and around the tumor.

In just three months, the cancer returned. Seamus, a once energetic dog, struggled to walk.

Seamus "was 150 pounds of heart," Howard Gillis, the dog's owner, said in a recent interview. "He wanted to live."

Read the whole story: Get "Spychips: How Major Corporations and Government plan to Track your every Move"

Gillis explained that he "got the microchip because I didn't want him stolen. I thought I was doing right. There were never any warnings about what a microchip could do, but I saw it first-hand. That cancer was something I could see growing every day, and I could see it taking his life … It just ate him up."

To end the suffering, Seamus was put to sleep in February.

Microchip embedded inside tumor


Scotty (Copyright Linda Hawkins 2010. All rights reserved.))

Albrecht told the story of another dog, a 5-year-old Yorkshire terrier named Scotty that was diagnosed with cancer in Memphis, Tenn. Scotty developed a tumor between his shoulder blades, in the same location where the microchip had been implanted. The tumor the size of a small balloon – described as malignant lymphoma – was removed. Scotty's microchip was embedded inside the tumor.

Scotty was given only a year to live. His owner, Linda Hawkins, said the veterinarian was skeptical that a chip implant could cause cancer.

In Scotty's December pathology report, the doctor wrote: "I was previously suspicious of a prior unrelated injection site reaction" beneath the tumor. "However, it is possible that this inflammation is associated with other foreign debris, possibly from the microchip."

The doctor said the chip was coated with a translucent material to keep the microchips from moving around the body. "This coating could be the material inciting the inflammatory response," he wrote.

A national pet recovery and identification network, asked a vet to review the pathology report, according to Hawkins. The company reported that the chip was not the cause of the tumor. However, Hawkins said the company sent her a $300 check to pay for medical expenses.

"I find it hard to believe that a company will just give away $300 to somebody who calls in, unless there is something bad going on," Hawkins said.

Hawkins reported spending $4,000 on medical treatment for Scotty since December.


Scotty's scar following surgery to remove tumor (Copyright Linda Hawkins 2010. All rights reserved.)

"Scotty is just a baby," she said. "He won't live the 15 years he's supposed to … I did something I thought a responsible pet owner should – microchip your pet – and to think that it killed him … It just breaks your heart."

Albrecht cited other reports of animals who suffered adverse reactions following implantation of microchips. Two other dogs experienced malignant tumors.

A French bulldog named Léon developed a lump at the microchip site only eight months after implantation. A biopsy indicated that Léon had a fibrosarcoma, an aggressive form of cancer.

As WND reported just last year, a Chihuahua named Charlie Brown experienced another outcome from the chipping procedure. He bled to death.

"I wasn't in favor of getting Charlie chipped, but it was the law," said Lori Ginsberg, the Chihuahua's owner, citing an ordinance that requires all dogs over the age of four months in unincorporated Los Angeles County be microchipped. Dog owners who refuse to comply face a $250 fine for the first offense and up to six months in jail and $1,000 fine for continued non-compliance.

"This technology is supposedly so great until it's your animal that dies," she said. "I can't believe Charlie is gone."

Malignant tumors in lab mice, rats

Likewise, in 2007, the Associated Press reported, "A series of veterinary and toxicology studies, dating to the mid-1990s, stated that chip implants had 'induced' malignant tumors in some lab mice and rats." They developed subcutaneous "sarcomas" – most of them encasing the implants.

Keith Johnson, a retired toxicologic pathologist, led a 1996 study at the Dow Chemical Co. in Midland, Mich.

"The transponders were the cause of the tumors," he told the AP.


Dr. Katherine Albrecht

Albrecht has authored a 52-page peer-reviewed article, titled "Microchip-Induced Tumors in Laboratory Rodents and Dogs: A Review of the Literature," in which she discusses literature published in oncology and toxicology journals between 1990 and 2006 that address the effects of implanted radio-frequency microchips on laboratory rodents and dogs.

Albrecht has been invited to present her findings at a June conference for the Institute for Electronic and Electrical Engineers, the world's leading professional association for the advancement of technology.

She said it is important that the public be made aware of the potential hazards of microchipping because some governments are seeking to make dog chipping mandatory. For example, the British government recently announced its proposal to impose penalties on pet owners who do not comply with chipping requirements. Ireland, New Zealand, Malta, Norway, Switzerland, Austria, Croatia, Italy and Portugal and even some places in the United States require mandatory microchipping. Likewise, USA Today reported Colorado requires implanting microchips in dogs that injure someone. Minnesota enacted a similar law in 2001, and in Virginia, dangerous dogs are required to have either a microchip or an identifying tattoo on the inner thigh.

Asked how prevalent the problem of pets developing cancerous growths following chip implantation really is, Albrecht told WND, "That's what we don't know, and that's why we are hoping the veterinary community will at least start to acknowledge these problems and start to report on these cases as they turn up. It seems there's a widespread lack of awareness in the veterinary community about this problem."

FDA: No studies linking chip implantation to cancer

In 2004, after investigating microchipping, the Food and Drug Administration found the process to be safe enough for use in humans and animals. In 2007, the New York Times reported federal regulators said animal data had been considered in the review of chip implantation in humans and that there were no controlled scientific studies linking chip implantation to cancer in dogs and cats. Lab rodents were said to be more prone than other animals to develop tumors from all types of injections.

"If there are any cancers from the chips, they are so rare that losing pets is far more serious," Dr. Lawrence D. McGill, a veterinary pathologist at Animal Reference Pathology, a veterinary laboratory in Salt Lake City, told the Times.

Likewise, the American Veterinary Medical Association website states, "Tumors associated with microchips in two dogs were reported, but in at least one of these dogs the tumor could not be directly linked to the microchip itself (and may have been caused by something else). … the risk that your animal will develop cancer due to its microchip is very, very low, and is far outweighed by the improved likelihood that you will get your animal back if it becomes lost."

However, Albrecht noted that side effects resulting from FDA-approved devices for human use are required to be reported, while those resulting from use of animal devices are not.

"If it's for animal use, there's no requirement," she said. "We suspect this is happening quite frequently, and it's simply not being reported."


Microchip inserted into pet (photo: Atascadero Pet Hospital and Emergency Center)

'Pet owners should be clearly advised'

Neither Albrecht nor the American Veterinary Medical Association recommend having microchips removed from pets that exhibit no reactions after the chips have been implanted because doing so would require invasive surgery. However, in her research paper, Albrecht recommends that policymakers "reverse all policies that mandate the microchipping of animals under their jurisdiction or control," including reversal of state and local ordinances and chipping policies at animal shelters.

She advocates a voluntary system of microchipping at the discretion of pet owners and asks that veterinarians familiarize themselves with research findings regarding adverse reactions before recommending implants for animals.

Albrecht also states, "Pet owners should be clearly advised of the research linking the microchip to cancer in rodents and dogs when seeking advice about the chipping procedure or choosing to have it done to their pets."

According to the paper, pet owners should routinely inspect the microchip site on their animals for unusual lumps or swelling and immediately report abnormalities.

Albrecht argues that it is far more efficient to fit dogs and cats with tags that contain owner contact information rather than chipping an animal and expecting the person who finds him to take him to a clinic or shelter to read the microchip.

"Then, if your neighbor finds your dog, rather than having to turn your dog in to the animal shelter where it might be put to sleep, your neighbor can call you and tell you they have him," she said.

As for pet owners who have not sought the procedure for their animals and are unsure of whether they should, Albrecht noted, "If a pet's not currently microchipped, it may be best to keep them that way."
Chad M ~ Your rebel against white guilt

Offline Rubystars

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #1 on: March 25, 2010, 06:56:03 PM »
It's better to microchip your pets. They're in much more danger of being lost and never returned to you than they are of getting cancer from the chip.

Offline New Yorker

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #2 on: March 25, 2010, 06:58:38 PM »

Sounds rational that there's a connection, it is an electronic device, and it emits low level radio radiation, who knows, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, in close proximity to the dog's internal tissues & cells, I bet it could cause cancer.
Nuke the arabs till they glow, then shoot them in the dark.

Offline Rubystars

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #3 on: March 25, 2010, 07:02:01 PM »

Sounds rational that there's a connection, it is an electronic device, and it emits low level radio radiation, who knows, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, in close proximity to the dog's internal tissues & cells, I bet it could cause cancer.

My cat Tiger has a chip. I'm going to get them for the others too in order to protect them.

Offline MassuhDGoodName

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #4 on: March 25, 2010, 08:16:35 PM »
This is not "news" -- malignant cancers have been reported on an ongoing basis for the last several years in animals which were implanted with microchips.

And, this is the very reason that the "big push" for human microchipping has "fallen off of the radar" in the last few years...because the chip makers and the others lobbying for their widespread injections into humans and animals now are facing irrefutable evidence that microchipping animals and humans produces malignant tumor growth around the area of the implated chip.


Offline Spiraling Leopard

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #5 on: March 26, 2010, 03:34:20 AM »
The chip is the sign of the anti-Christ.

Offline Zelhar

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #6 on: March 26, 2010, 03:49:23 AM »
In Israel cats are not implanted with chips. But Dogs are. I think the radiation, if it emits at all, is not the risk factor, but rather the chemical composition of the chip. Maybe it contains some toxic metals that might leak into the dog's body.

Offline Rubystars

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #7 on: March 26, 2010, 09:07:41 AM »
The chip is the sign of the anti-Christ.

I think we have to think differently about its use in animals versus people though. In animals, it can bring a beloved pet home where its safe. In humans, it could allow a malevolent government to track you. It's completely different.

My vet lost his cat during a storm and somehow it ended up at an animal shelter. By chance (or by G-d's help), someone adopted the cat and brought it to his practice! He thought that was his cat, but he scanned for a chip to be sure. Sure enough, that was his cat, and he was able to get her back!

Without the chip, he never would have gotten her again. The shelter should have scanned for a chip, but for some reason it didn't.


If a shelter does scan for a chip it will save the animal from euthanasia.

Offline Spiraling Leopard

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #8 on: March 26, 2010, 10:46:17 AM »
The chip is the sign of the anti-Christ.

I think we have to think differently about its use in animals versus people though. In animals, it can bring a beloved pet home where its safe. In humans, it could allow a malevolent government to track you. It's completely different.

My vet lost his cat during a storm and somehow it ended up at an animal shelter. By chance (or by G-d's help), someone adopted the cat and brought it to his practice! He thought that was his cat, but he scanned for a chip to be sure. Sure enough, that was his cat, and he was able to get her back!

Without the chip, he never would have gotten her again. The shelter should have scanned for a chip, but for some reason it didn't.


If a shelter does scan for a chip it will save the animal from euthanasia.

The world is a jungle and fate's fate.

I would rather not know what happened to an animal and put him in the hands of god, than let him/her suffer from being an android by the hand of man.

Offline syyuge

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #9 on: March 26, 2010, 11:32:44 AM »
For millions of years, the animals were freely under the shelter of G_d and survived. Now in all the muslamic countries, they have killed and eaten up all the animals and replaced them by their own self. 

There are thunders and sparks in the skies, because Faraday invented the electricity.

Offline Rubystars

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #10 on: March 26, 2010, 11:38:20 AM »
I don't know about where you live, but where I live there are big medical centers that take animals from pounds. Not knowing if your dog was hit by a car is one thing. Not knowing if he's had his brain cut on or if he's had electrodes attached to measure pain response is quite another. Pound seizure (laboratories getting former pets from shelters) is a reality. One family tracked their dog to University of Texas Medical center and found out he died there.

How would you feel if that was your beloved pet?

Offline Rubystars

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #11 on: March 26, 2010, 11:49:36 AM »
Would you rather chip your pet or let this happen to them?

Vivisection (graphic):


"She is lying on a cold, concrete slab, bleeding heavily into the floor drain. This recovery pen is outside, exposed to the weather. For the two hours the filmmaker had this dog under observation, no attention of any kind was provided."

"These pound-seized dogs have been given drugs to produce bleeding, peptic ulcers. Their vocal chords have been cut, to prevent barking which might disturb the lab personnel."

"These cats have had electrodes surgically implanted in their heads. Their brains were damaged and they were partially paralyzed. For six months these crippled animals were made to exercise on a treadmill"

"The brains and sexual organs of these cats were cut to test theories about psychosexual problems".
« Last Edit: March 26, 2010, 12:00:10 PM by Rubystars »

Offline New Yorker

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #12 on: March 26, 2010, 02:40:30 PM »


What do people have against a simple collar and tag? Worked fine for almost 100 years, now all of a sudden we need electronic chips?
Nuke the arabs till they glow, then shoot them in the dark.

Offline Rubystars

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #13 on: March 27, 2010, 10:15:05 PM »


What do people have against a simple collar and tag? Worked fine for almost 100 years, now all of a sudden we need electronic chips?

There should also be a collar and tag on the animal, but there are some advantages to having a chip in addition to a collar and tag.

Primarily, the chip can't be removed as easily if the animal is stolen, and the animal can't remove it themselves if they are lost. Dogs have had tattoos CUT out of them with a knife by thieves in order to remove identification, so even tattooing is not as fool proof as a chip. A chip can also hold more information than a tag.

Offline Zelhar

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #14 on: March 28, 2010, 02:14:49 AM »
The chip is the sign of the anti-Christ.

I think we have to think differently about its use in animals versus people though. In animals, it can bring a beloved pet home where its safe. In humans, it could allow a malevolent government to track you. It's completely different.

My vet lost his cat during a storm and somehow it ended up at an animal shelter. By chance (or by G-d's help), someone adopted the cat and brought it to his practice! He thought that was his cat, but he scanned for a chip to be sure. Sure enough, that was his cat, and he was able to get her back!

Without the chip, he never would have gotten her again. The shelter should have scanned for a chip, but for some reason it didn't.


If a shelter does scan for a chip it will save the animal from euthanasia.

The world is a jungle and fate's fate.

I would rather not know what happened to an animal and put him in the hands of G-d, than let him/her suffer from being an android by the hand of man.
I don't see why you would think so. This chip is conceptually the same as the old collar tag, and for dogs such thing is proper. Dogs are not people, they are animals and they need to be taken cared of by their owner, and they are their owner's property.
I had my late dog located and returned thanks to this chip and especially thanks to some caring people who rescued her. We don't need to leave everything to the hand of God, not if we can do it ourselves.

Offline Rubystars

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #15 on: March 28, 2010, 02:39:30 AM »
I don't see why you would think so. This chip is conceptually the same as the old collar tag, and for dogs such thing is proper. Dogs are not people, they are animals and they need to be taken cared of by their owner, and they are their owner's property.
I had my late dog located and returned thanks to this chip and especially thanks to some caring people who rescued her.


Zelhar, I'm so glad that you got your dog back! I'm even more convinced now that chips are well worth it. I've still got to get chips in three of my cats, only one is chipped so far.

When I can afford it I'm going to get Casey and Serena spayed and have them chipped at the same time (they're not in immediate danger of being pregnant because their brother Tiger is neutered). Miss Kitty is spayed already but needs a chip. I'm having to save up my money to get this stuff done but I think it's worth it.

Quote
We don't need to leave everything to the hand of G-d, not if we can do it ourselves.

Yes I agree with this. Sometimes the way in which God helps us is to provide us tools like this that we can use.

Offline Spiraling Leopard

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #16 on: March 28, 2010, 02:47:51 AM »
I don't see why you would think so. This chip is conceptually the same as the old collar tag, and for dogs such thing is proper. Dogs are not people, they are animals and they need to be taken cared of by their owner, and they are their owner's property.
I had my late dog located and returned thanks to this chip and especially thanks to some caring people who rescued her. We don't need to leave everything to the hand of G-d, not if we can do it ourselves.

The point is whether or not you should turn your animal into an android.
What justifies man's right to turn an animal into an android?

Offline Spiraling Leopard

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #17 on: March 28, 2010, 02:53:15 AM »
Sometimes the way in which G-d helps us is to provide us tools like this that we can use.

What you are saying is that god wants animals to get cancer from chips.

Offline Spiraling Leopard

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #18 on: March 28, 2010, 02:54:52 AM »
God wants us to kill and destroy all animal-haters.

Offline Rubystars

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #19 on: March 28, 2010, 04:38:04 AM »
Sometimes the way in which G-d helps us is to provide us tools like this that we can use.

What you are saying is that G-d wants animals to get cancer from chips.

No. I don't think there's good evidence yet that the cancer is actually caused by them. Even if it does raise the risk slightly, you have to weigh the risk versus the benefit. With all the animals getting chips, those who would get cancer at the chip site are rare, versus the animals who benefit by having them injected.

Vaccines are probably more risky than these microchips, but we'd be like a third world nation if most dogs that are vaccinated weren't vaccinated for rabies. If a dog bites you in the USA, you more than likely don't have to worry about it. If a dog bites you in Mexico, it's a different story. Vaccines have a risk versus benefit ratio and so do the chips.

As for your argument about turning animals into androids, it seems a little bit silly considering that it's just an implant the size of a grain of rice. It's not like you're switching out their eyes for robot eyes or attaching a mechanical tail.

Offline Zelhar

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Re: Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
« Reply #20 on: March 28, 2010, 05:50:11 AM »
Robert if you are serious please explain why do you think implanting a tiny passive chip turns a dog into an android ? I think the tem you actually means to say is cyborg but either way it doesn't turn them into anything IMO.

As for the cancer risk I think Ruby is right about the very low risk it carries even though it should be researched. Of course I wouldn't allow chips like that implanted in humans. But the thing is the chip is actually beneficial to dogs and dog's owner and it doesn't degrade or infringe the liberty of dogs as it it would for humans if used on them.