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Global
Leadership in Education
and Research
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BSE
- Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy
"Mad Cow Disease"
BSE:
bovine TSE
- Bovine Spongiform
Encephalopathy (BSE) is a fatal disease that affects the brain of cattle
- BSE is one of several
diseases catagorized as Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies
(TSEs)
- The disease is believed
to be caused by a "self-replicating" protein (a prion; PrPSc) rather
than a bacterium or virus
- Meat, blood and milk
have not been shown to carry the infective agent
- Measures have been taken
to exclude tissues that carry the infective agent (i.e. brain & nervous
tissue) from the food supply
- No cases of BSE have
been reported in the United States
CJD: human
TSE
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob
Disease (CJD) is a prion disease in humans
- Almost all cases of CJD
are spontaneous, inherited or iatrogenic
- A small number of variant
CJD (vCJD) cases have been linked to BSE exposure
- Daniel C. Gajdusek discovered
the first form of human TSE in the 1950's, called Kuru
- Daniel C. Gajdusek was
awarded a Nobel Prize for his work in 1976
- Stanley B. Prusiner was
awarded a Nobel Prize in 1997 for his work on prions
- No cases of vCJD have
been reported in the United States
BSE
was first observed in Great Britain in April, 1984, and was specifically diagnosed
in 1986. By June, 1990, there were some 14,000 confirmed cases out of an estimated
population of 10 million cattle in Great Britain. Since 1986, nearly 200,000
cases of BSE in cattle have been identified in the United Kingdom. The epidemic
peaked in 1992-93 at almost 1,000 cases per week. Control measures have reduced
incidence and currently, less than 100 cases are being reported per week.
As June
2001, the disease has been reported in domestic cattle of several
European countries including:
- Ireland
- Portugal
- Switzerland
- France
- Germany
- Spain
- Belgium
- Netherlands
- Denmark
- Italy
- Liechtenstein
- Luxembourg
- Greece
- Czech Republic
- and in cattle exported
from England to Oman, the Falkland Islands and Canada.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture's
(USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service (APHIS) has banned importation
of live cattle or meat products from BSE-infected countries since 1989 and is
conducting surveillance for BSE to ensure that it does not become established
in the United States. In 1997, the FDA
has also been put in place a ruminant to ruminant feed ban similar to that in
Great Britain as an additional safeguard.