Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Woman Credits Her Dog For Saving Her Life After He Sniffs Out A Lime-Sized Tumor In Her Breast

Woman Credits Her Dog For Saving Her Life After He Sniffs Out A Lime-Sized Tumor In Her Breast
PA REAL LIFE/COLLECT

A dog lover has praised her pet greyhound for saving her life by sniffing out a lime-sized cancerous tumor in her left breast, which she dubbed Damien – after the boy in The Omen horror film.


Amanda Evans-Nash, 50, who works for British Airways, was lying in bed one morning, when her pooch Jimmy jumped up and started pawing and sniffing at her chest.

Pushing him away, her hand brushed against a lump in her left breast, which she had not previously noticed and resulted in a diagnosis of triple negative breast cancer.

Amanda and greyhound JimmyPA REAL LIFE/COLLECT

Amanda, of Prestwich, Greater Manchester, whose husband, Graham Nash, 53, works for Marks and Spencer, now wants to raise awareness of the condition, saying:

“My cancer was very sizeable, aggressive and already spreading."

“Who knows what the outcome of my story would've been if it wasn't for Jimmy and his persistent sniffing that morning?"

“Now, all I want to do is raise awareness. A lot of people don't even realise that there's more than one type of breast cancer."

Amanda having chemotherapyPA REAL LIFE/COLLECT

She continued:

“Breast cancer charities are already perceived as being over subscribed to, but there's still such a long way to go with research – particularly with the form of the disease I had."

Her experience adds weight to findings of a study by US firm BioScentDx, released earlier this year, which showed that dogs – known to have smell receptors 10,000 times more accurate than humans – could sniff out blood samples from people with cancer with almost 97 per cent accuracy.

Certainly, Amanda swears she was first alerted to her cancer one morning in June 2017 when she was lying in bed with her left arm raised above her head and Jimmy jumped up beside her, before persistently sniffing around her breast and armpit area.

He just wouldn't leave me alone. It was really tickling me, so I reached over with my right hand to gently push him away – and when I did, I felt a lump under my left nipple
Amanda Evans-Nash

She said:

“He just wouldn't leave me alone. It was really tickling me, so I reached over with my right hand to gently push him away – and when I did, I felt a lump under my left nipple."

To her horror, when she examined herself in the mirror, the lump was clearly visible and Amanda immediately began to fear the worst.

First thing the next morning, she saw her GP, who told her it could simply be a cyst, but referred her to Ninewells Hospital in Dundee, Scotland, near where she was living at the time.

Amanda and greyhound JimmyPA REAL LIFE/COLLECT

Told it would be around two weeks before she could be seen, she went into work and told her boss, who kindly helped her to call local private hospitals, before landing an appointment that day at 1pm at the BMI Ross Hall Hospital in Glasgow.

“By 6pm I had been diagnosed with breast cancer."

“Graham had been waiting for me in a different room, but when I got the diagnosis. I felt numb."

Amanda with bruising on her breastPA REAL LIFE/COLLECT

Amanda continued:

“I could barely look at him for fear of breaking down. When I came back into the room, he gave me this look as if to say, 'So? Any news?'"

“All I could do was shake my head."

Given an urgent referral back to Ninewells, she then had a biopsy to determine exactly what sort of breast cancer she had and whether it had spread.

After my diagnosis, I cried solidly for about two days, but I have always tried to see the positive, and use humour to get through
Amanda Evans-Nash

The results confirmed she had triple negative invasive ductal carcinoma breast cancer, an uncommon form of the disease, the symptoms of which include changes in the size, shape or feel of the breast, dimpling of the skin, a rash on the nipple and surrounding area and swelling in the armpit.

Her main tumor was the lime-sized growth she had originally felt, but another smaller one was also found at the top of her breast and the cancer had spread to her lymph nodes.

“After my diagnosis, I cried solidly for about two days, but I have always tried to see the positive, and use humor to get through."

Amanda and greyhounds Betty, Jimmy and DaisyPA REAL LIFE/COLLECT

“And eventually I realized that sinking into my pajamas and watching Jeremy Kyle all day wasn't going to get me better."

“So, I thought to myself, 'Right, enough crying. Let's beat the b****r.'"

Then, on the way to her first chemotherapy session at Perth Royal Infirmary, about two weeks after her diagnosis, something remarkable happened.

Amanda said:

“My dad Gerry Evans had only died in the October before I was diagnosed, and at his funeral, I read a poem called 'Look for Me In Rainbows.'

“As I drove up to Perth, I saw a huge rainbow overhead – and I've seen one a few times since then before appointments."

“People may say it was just a coincidence, but it was still comforting."

Amanda and JimmyPA REAL LIFE/COLLECT

She said:

“To me, it was Dad watching over, saying, 'You're going to be alright, kid.'"

Just 15 days after beginning chemotherapy, Amanda's hair started falling out so, to regain some control, she shaved her head, rather than enduring the emotional pain of watching it fall out bit by bit.

Then, following 18 weeks of chemotherapy, which ended in November 2017, she had surgery in January 2018.

Amanda and JimmyPA REAL LIFE/COLLECT

As the treatment had shrunk her tumor, she did not need a mastectomy, instead having a wide local excision, where just the lump and some healthy tissue around it was cut away.

Doctors also removed 29 lymph nodes and sent them away to be biopsied, to find out if the cancer had spread any further.

And as she waited for the results, she had six weeks of radiotherapy, which finished in April 2018.

I still have some pain in my breast, because of all the scar tissue, but apart from that and some aching in my joints, which I'm told can be a side-effect of chemo, I feel amazing
Amanda Evans-Nash

Thankfully, Amanda was given the all clear, after results showed her lymph nodes were cancer-free.

“I still have some pain in my breast, because of all the scar tissue, but apart from that and some aching in my joints, which I'm told can be a side-effect of chemo, I feel amazing."

In May, as a way of repaying the “fantastic" care she received and to raise money and awareness, Amanda and some friends took part in Walk the Walk's annual MoonWalk, which sees thousands of men and women take to the streets and walk 26 miles through the night in specially decorated bras.

Amanda with her husband GrahamPA REAL LIFE/COLLECT

“We called our team The Pinky Promises because during treatment, my two little cousins made me pinky promise to be brave, to do what the doctors said and not to cry."

Feeling healthy once more, Amanda is now awaiting her five year all clear mark, after which the risk of her cancer returning will be lowered.

In the meantime, she has vowed to do all she can to encourage others to check their breasts.

Amanda and her mum ElizabethPA REAL LIFE/COLLECT

And she has nothing but praise for the pooch who saved her life.

“It still astonishes me how I could have missed the tumor, but Jimmy found it."

“He's ten years old now, and we got him from a greyhound rescue centre we used to volunteer at. He was always my favorite, so I was delighted to be able to bring him home."

“Now, I want to get people talking. Far too often, people will say they had no idea there were so many types of breast cancer."

Amanda with JimmyPA REAL LIFE/COLLECT

She concluded:

“Triple negative, especially, which is what I had, has a long way to go as far as research is concerned. It is more difficult to treat, as you can't use hormone treatments, and it only makes up around 15 per cent of breast cancer cases, according to Cancer Research UK, so it is relatively rare."

“But the more people talk, the more they will survive."

The MoonWalk London 2020 takes place on Saturday 16 May. To find out more or to sign-up to take part visit www.walkthewalk.org

More from News

Elon Musk
Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

Elon Musk Dragged After Showing Off His Juvenile Fake Police Badge Declaring Himself 'The Dogefather'

Billionaire Elon Musk was widely ridiculed after sharing a photo of his fake law enforcement badge—complete with the badge number "69420"—that declares him "The Dogefather," flexing his authority as the leader of the advisory Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), which is at the center of the ongoing slash-and-burn approach to gutting federal spending.

Musk appeared positively thrilled when he shared the photo—perhaps the most cringey thing he's done, at least thus far, since attaining unprecedented political power.

Keep Reading Show less
Jacob Elordi; Margot Robbie
Don Arnold/WireImage/Getty Images; MICHAEL TRAN/AFP/Getty Images

'Wuthering Heights' Film Casting Director Irks Fans After Justifying Casting Decisions By Claiming 'It's Just A Book'

It was recently announced that Wuthering Heights, the 1847 novel by Emily Brontë, is being adapted for the screen at Warner Bros. Pictures. The leading director is Emerald Fennell, and the casting director is Kharmel Cochrane, who was involved in the award-winning Nosferatu and Saltburn.

For those who got through high school and college without having to read the novel, it's a dark, psychological thriller with Gothic horror undertones—and also a love story. That's the power of Emily Brontë, who published just one novel in her lifetime.

Keep Reading Show less
Terrence Howard; Marvin Gaye
Chris Haston/WBTV via Getty Images; Kypros/Getty Images

Terrence Howard Shares Homophobic Reason He Turned Down Marvin Gaye Biopic Role—And Yikes

Actor Terrence Howard may have an Oscar nomination for his no holds barred approach to roles, but it turns out there is a limit to what he'll do onscreen, and kissing a man is beyond that limit.

Howard told Bill Maher that he turned down the role of a lifetime, playing legendary musician Marvin Gaye in a biopic by director Lee Daniels, once he learned of Gaye's sexuality.

Keep Reading Show less
Lindsey Graham; Donald Trump
Amir Levy/Getty Images; Win McNamee/Getty Images

Lindsey Graham Sparks Fury After Suggesting That Trump Could Be The Next Pope

After President Donald Trump jokingly told reporters that he'd "like to be pope" following the death of Pope Francis, South Carolina Republican Senator Lindsey Graham threw himself behind Trump's remarks, which came after Trump already raised the ire of critics for seemingly falling asleep at the Pope's funeral.

Trump said that he himself "would be my number one choice" to be the next pope after he was asked who he’d like to see become the next pontiff. That would never, ever happen—and disrespects the billions of Catholics around the world who are in mourning—but Graham suggested it was a good idea in a post on X.

Keep Reading Show less
Donald Trump
Scott Olson/Getty Images

Fox News Just Listed Off Trump's 'Accomplishments' So Far—And They're Completely Bananas

As shown during coverage of a cabinet meeting when members spent time telling the President how great he is, MAGA Republican President Donald Trump's biggest priority is Donald Trump's image and ego.

Also caught on video was Trump telling a Fox News correspondent to make sure the network praised his cabinet meeting.

Keep Reading Show less