vCJD in a Canadian resident Canadian News Brief - March 11,

Help Support CattleToday:

flounder

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 27, 2006
Messages
1,052
Reaction score
5
Location
TEXAS
Infectious Diseases News Brief - March 11, 2011

[Current Issue - Table of contents]

Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease in a Canadian resident Canadian

Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease Surveillance System, National Microbiology Laboratory, Public Health Agency of Canada Working closely with Canadian clinical specialists, the Public Health Agency of Canada's Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease Surveillance System (CJDSS) has identified a probable case of variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (variant CJD, also called vCJD) in a Canadian resident. The diagnosis is supported by several lines of clinical, paraclinical and laboratory evidence, in keeping with internationally accepted surveillance case definitions for human prion disease.(1, 2) This is the second case of variant CJD reported in Canada to date. The first such case occurred in 2002, in an individual who is believed to have contracted the disease outside of Canada.(3) As explained in more detail below, evidence to date strongly indicates that (i) the risk exposure in the second case also occurred outside Canada; (ii) there are no negative implications for the safety of the Canadian food supply; and (iii) the case poses no secondary risks to the health of Canadians.

Variant CJD belongs to a group of rare, fatal degenerative brain disorders called prion diseases that affect humans and animals and can arise sporadically, genetically, or through infectious transmission.(4) Prion diseases are marked by brain tissue vacuolation (spongiform change), neuronal loss, and presence of a pathologically altered form of a host-encoded glycoprotein, PrP, that is considered to constitute the transmissible agent, or prion.(5) Among classic types of human prion disease, the most common and widespread is sporadic CJD, which occurs without an apparent infectious or genetic cause mostly in persons 50+ years of age and accounts for 80–90% of the remarkably uniform annual prion disease mortality of ~1–2 per million population.(6) Most of the remaining 10–20% of classic human prion diseases are caused by mutations in the PRNP gene that encodes PrP.(7) Fewer than 1% of classic cases of CJD are attributed to accidental transmission through surgical and medical procedures such as dura mater grafts, and use of therapeutic hormone preparations that were derived from prion-contaminated cadaveric pituitary tissue.(8)

Variant CJD is the only known zoonotic human prion disease, resulting from dietary exposure to a feedborne prion disease of cattle, bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE, also known as "mad cow disease"), that emerged internationally in the 1980s and 1990s.(9) Most human exposure to BSE is thought to have occurred before regulatory controls were implemented to control BSE in animals and to eliminate the inclusion of high-risk bovine tissues in human food.(10) A small number of secondary cases of variant CJD have also been linked to transfusion of fresh blood components (erythrocytes) from pre-symptomatic donors who later developed the disease.(11) By October 2010, a total of 222 definite and probable variant CJD cases had been reported worldwide in residents of 12 countries.(12) The total numbers of clinical cases of variant CJD that will ultimately emerge remains uncertain, as does the frequency of long-term asymptomatic carriage during which apparently healthy individuals could transmit infection for example through blood donation or invasive medical procedures.(13)

Importantly, based on extensive interviews with family members there is no indication that the current patient was ever a blood donor, received a blood transfusion, or underwent a surgical procedure that was not managed to prevent prion transmission as per the Public Health Agency of Canada's CJD Infection Control Guidelines.(14) This indicates the absence of secondary risks to the health of Canadians as a result of this case. Health Canada issued directives to Canadian blood operators in 1999, 2000, 2001 and 2005, requiring deferral of blood donors with a history of residence and/or travel in the United Kingdom (UK), France and Western Europe in the period 1980-1996, as well as other criteria including receipt of blood transfusion in the UK, and has committed to review these deferral policies if new scientific information becomes available. Canada has also reported a small number of cases of BSE,(15) and Health Canada and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency have implemented regulations to prevent both the transmission of BSE in animal populations and human exposure to it. Given (i) these protective measures, (ii) the observation that acquired prion diseases have long incubation periods (years to often a decade or more), and (iii) the fact that the current patient experienced onset of symptoms just prior to immigrating to Canada in early 2010, the possibility of BSE exposure in this country can essentially be ruled out as the cause of illness. The patient was born in the Middle East, and also resided in several other countries before arriving in Canada. Apart from a few visits totalling less than three months in duration, there was no history of travel to the UK or Europe.

In Canada, all human prion diseases are both legally reportable at the provincial/territorial level and nationally notifiable, and despite their rarity the public health importance and economic impacts of these diseases have maintained a need for timely diagnosis, reporting, and surveillance. To help meet these requirements the CJDSS has conducted prospective national surveillance of human prion diseases continuously since 1998, and working collaboratively with a network of health professionals sponsors detailed diagnostic and epidemiologic investigation of any suspected case of human prion disease in Canada. Supporting laboratory services are provided for autopsy, neuropathologic examination, molecular genetics, and biochemical testing for 14-3-3 protein in cerebrospinal fluid. Test results are reported directly to referring health professionals, with CJDSS case files maintained centrally to facilitate diagnostic assessment and final case classification. Full patient enrolment with the CJDSS takes place with written informed consent. The CJDSS surveillance protocol has been approved by the Health Canada Research Ethics Board (Certificate REB-2009-0036), and by numerous REBs at collaborating healthcare institutions. For further information on human prion diseases, available services and how to access them, interested health professionals are invited to contact the CJDSS toll-free, at 1-888-489-2999.

References



snip...end




http://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/ccdrw-rmtch/ ... 1r-eng.php


Friday, March 4, 2011

Alberta dairy cow found with mad cow disease

http://transmissiblespongiformencephalo ... d-cow.html


Saturday, March 5, 2011

MAD COW ATYPICAL CJD PRION TSE CASES WITH CLASSIFICATIONS PENDING ON THE RISE IN NORTH AMERICA

http://transmissiblespongiformencephalo ... cases.html


Wednesday, March 9, 2011

27 U.S. Senators want to force feed Japan Highly Potential North America Mad Cow Beef TSE PRION CJD

March 8, 2011

President Barack Obama The White House

1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, W Washington, DC 20500

Dear President Obama:

http://transmissiblespongiformencephalo ... japan.html


Saturday, March 12, 2011

Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease in a Canadian resident Infectious Diseases News Brief - March 11, 2011

http://transmissiblespongiformencephalo ... se-in.html


TSS
 
Is this a recurring post, the Canadian cattle news? I'm a bit flabbergasted and worried seeing as how I am about to start interning over near Tillamook, Oregon soon pretty close to all this infection...
 
Besides all controls, all these infections I believe are actually very rare in Canada.
I guess that the original article was written by some journalist who likes to exaggeration.
Does anyone else thinks like me ?

Regards.
 
I agree completely goran, overly exaggerated to the max.

________
"whatever the mind can conceive and believe it can achieve"
 
Patient was from the middle east, no chance it was acquired in canada. He probably ate a sick goat. It's a non story posted by a sick man.
 
Haha, I like it. Good point fatcattle :)

________
"whatever the mind can conceive and believe it can achieve"
 
Rare but they do happen, so no point discounting an ill, simply because he doesn't happen with regularity.
 
EDMONTON - Some of former Alberta premier Ralph Klein's most colourful quotes — and the reactions they elicited:



SNIP...





"This all came about through the discovery of a single, isolated case of mad cow disease in one Alberta cow on May 20th. The farmer — I think he was a Louisiana fish farmer who knew nothing about cattle ranching. I guess any self-respecting rancher would have shot, shovelled and shut up, but he didn't do that." — Klein recalls how the mad cow crisis started and rancher Marwyn Peaster's role. The premier was speaking at the Western Governors Association meeting in Big Sky, Mont. September 2004.



"The premier meant that in an ironic or almost a sarcastic way." — Klein spokesman Gordon Turtle.

---

"You would have to eat 10 billion meals of brains, spinal cords, ganglia, eyeballs and tonsils." — Klein speaking in Montreal in January 2005 on the risk of humans contracting mad cow disease.

---

"I would offer $5 billion to have a Japanese person to come over here and eat nothing but Alberta beef for a year. And if he gets mad cow disease, I would be glad to give him $5 billion — make it $10 billion — Canadian." — Klein speaking after Japan closed its borders to Canadian beef.

---





http://www.edmontonjournal.com/news/Kle ... story.html



Sunday, March 31, 2013

Creutzfeldt Jakob Disease CJD worlds youngest documented victim, 11 years old, shall we pray

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=pl ... YDTBHCNx3w


SEE STORY AND MORE HERE ;



Sunday, March 31, 2013

Creutzfeldt Jakob Disease CJD worlds youngest documented victim, 11 years old, shall we pray

http://creutzfeldt-jakob-disease.blogsp ... orlds.html




Wednesday, March 20, 2013

GAO-13-244, Mar 18, 2013 Dietary Supplements FDA May Have Opportunities to Expand Its Use of Reported Health Problems to Oversee Product



http://transmissiblespongiformencephalo ... etary.html





Wednesday, February 20, 2013

World Organization for Animal Health Recommends United States' BSE Risk Status Be Upgraded

Statement from Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack:

http://madcowusda.blogspot.com/2013/02/ ... ealth.html





Tuesday, March 05, 2013

A closer look at prion strains Characterization and important implications Prion

7:2, 99–108; March/April 2013; © 2013 Landes Bioscience


http://creutzfeldt-jakob-disease.blogsp ... rains.html




kind regards,
terry
 
moodacow":289e6d6h said:
Is this a recurring post, the Canadian cattle news? I'm a bit flabbergasted and worried seeing as how I am about to start interning over near Tillamook, Oregon soon pretty close to all this infection...

Moodacow

You obviously do not know much about this problem.

1. It occurs in the US of A as well as most other countries.

2. Flounder is a creepy person with an axe to grind

3. Millions of cattle in North America and only a few cases north and south of the border - you stand a greater chance of being hit by lightening than being caught up in this problem.

4. Believing anything flounder says is like eating everything you see - you will soon be as sick as this person is.

5. An American immigrant to the Canadian cattle industry created this stir in the first place - if you prescribe to the conspiracy - which I do not - however it was found on his ranch. He got an entire new herd and cattle operation given to him by the Canadian government - my family on the other hand nearly went broke and still owes more than a quarter million bucks to the banks (money needed to save the place) - during the big bailout that RCALF complained about, we got about 200 bucks - almost enough for two tanks of gas in the truck.

I could go on but if you cannot see the picture by now you are not an intelligent person.

Finally - relax and enjoy your internship - which as an uneducated person I assume means you have a job on a farm or a ranch.

My best

Bez
 
flounder":2tjdszog said:
EDMONTON - Some of former Alberta premier Ralph Klein's most colourful quotes — and the reactions they elicited:



SNIP...





"This all came about through the discovery of a single, isolated case of mad cow disease in one Alberta cow on May 20th. The farmer — I think he was a Louisiana fish farmer who knew nothing about cattle ranching. I guess any self-respecting rancher would have shot, shovelled and shut up, but he didn't do that." — Klein recalls how the mad cow crisis started and rancher Marwyn Peaster's role. The premier was speaking at the Western Governors Association meeting in Big Sky, Mont. September 2004.



"The premier meant that in an ironic or almost a sarcastic way." — Klein spokesman Gordon Turtle.

---

"You would have to eat 10 billion meals of brains, spinal cords, ganglia, eyeballs and tonsils." — Klein speaking in Montreal in January 2005 on the risk of humans contracting mad cow disease.

---

"I would offer $5 billion to have a Japanese person to come over here and eat nothing but Alberta beef for a year. And if he gets mad cow disease, I would be glad to give him $5 billion — make it $10 billion — Canadian." — Klein speaking after Japan closed its borders to Canadian beef.

---





http://www.edmontonjournal.com/news/Kle ... story.html



Sunday, March 31, 2013

Creutzfeldt Jakob Disease CJD worlds youngest documented victim, 11 years old, shall we pray

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=pl ... YDTBHCNx3w


SEE STORY AND MORE HERE ;



Sunday, March 31, 2013

Creutzfeldt Jakob Disease CJD worlds youngest documented victim, 11 years old, shall we pray

http://creutzfeldt-jakob-disease.blogsp ... orlds.html




Wednesday, March 20, 2013

GAO-13-244, Mar 18, 2013 Dietary Supplements FDA May Have Opportunities to Expand Its Use of Reported Health Problems to Oversee Product



http://transmissiblespongiformencephalo ... etary.html





Wednesday, February 20, 2013

World Organization for Animal Health Recommends United States' BSE Risk Status Be Upgraded

Statement from Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack:

http://madcowusda.blogspot.com/2013/02/ ... ealth.html





Tuesday, March 05, 2013

A closer look at prion strains Characterization and important implications Prion

7:2, 99–108; March/April 2013; © 2013 Landes Bioscience


http://creutzfeldt-jakob-disease.blogsp ... rains.html




kind regards,
terry

And still no proof of zoonotic transmission. There's a better chance of flounders mom being resurrected than founder being able to price zoonotic transmission
 
Top