Scientist:
'Mad Cow' May Not Cause Human Illness
Mad cow disease and the illness thought to
be its human equivalent may not be linked after all.
George Venters, an expert in public health
medicine in Hamilton, Scotland, believes the rogue prion brain protein that
causes mad cow disease, or bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), does not
cause new variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (vCJD) -- a degenerative brain
disease found in humans.
Venters said he does not believe that the
evidence now available casts serious doubts on the case for a causal link
between bovine spongiform encephalopathy and new variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease and that the epidemiological evidence just doesn't stack up.
The link between the animal and human
brain-wasting diseases is open to question, he added, because it does not
meet criteria used by scientists to assess a link between cause and effect
for disease.
When you apply them to the case of BSE
causing vCJD, the evidence is weak. A telling point is the number and pattern
of cases detected is different from what you usually find in epidemics caused
by eating contaminated food.
British scientists first identified vCJD
in 1996 and suggested eating meat infected with BSE was the cause. The
condition causes degeneration of the victim's brain tissue and eventual
death.
But Venters said there is no direct evidence that the prion responsible for BSE and other
animal diseases is infectious in humans.
Prions in animals and humans are
different, he argues, and humans do not get other animal prion diseases such
as scrapie -- found in sheep -- from eating lamb.
Also, ingestion is an inefficient route of
transmission of prions other than by cannibalism. Infection of humans from
eating the bovine spongiform encephalopathy prion is therefore unlikely.
In a report in the British Medical
Journal, Venters listed other inconsistencies including the relatively small
number of cases of vCJD, lack of details about exposure to the infectious
agent and the pattern of infection, which does not fit in with other
food-borne diseases.
If vCJD is caused by eating beef
contaminated with BSE, Venters said the number of cases should be much higher
than the 100 or so confirmed cases reported so far.
Reuters
London, October 12, 2001
DR. MERCOLA'S
COMMENT:
More evidence that the conventionally
held cause of Mad Cow Disease may not be due to what we think it is and more
related to insecticide use on the animals.
Related
Articles:
Insecticide
Causes Mad Cow Disease
How You Can Avoid Mad
Cow Disease
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