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Daily Press

Portsmouth woman's death under investigation


By VERONICA GORLEY CHUFO

April 11, 2008

RICHMOND

The illness and Wednesday death of a Portsmouth woman spurred a Virginia Department of Health investigation Thursday.

The woman suffered from encephalopathy, a degenerative brain disease. Her illness has been linked in news reports to variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease — the human form of mad cow disease.

It's a very rare condition related to the consumption of beef infected with bovine spongiform encephalopathy. It's always fatal, the health department said in a news release.

Snip

An MRI, or brain scan, was sent to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. Additional tests will be handled by the University of Virginia and the National Prion Disease Pathology Surveillance Center in Cleveland. Results are expected to take several months.

At least 200 cases of variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease have been reported worldwide since 1996. Three cases have been reported in U.S. residents, and they were all exposed outside the country, Remley said...

Excerpted. Continuing Portsmouth woman's death under investigation


1 posted on 04/12/2008 5:06:36 PM PDT by bd476
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To: All


Also see:

2 deaths in Spain linked to mad cow disease--authorities


2 posted on 04/12/2008 5:08:38 PM PDT by bd476
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To: bd476

May she rest in peace. Her mother said she had never travelled outside of the United States.


3 posted on 04/12/2008 5:10:05 PM PDT by brwnsuga (Proud, Black, Sexy Conservative!!!)
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To: All
Cattle Network

Beef Library: Background On BSE & vCJD

4/10/2008 6:52:00 AM

BSE (sometimes referred to as "mad cow disease") and variant and classic CJD belong to the unusual group of progressive, degenerative neurological diseases known as transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs).

These diseases are characterized by a long incubation period of up to several years, during which there is no visible indication of the disease. The incubation period for BSE among cattle ranges from three to eight years; for vCJD among humans, the incubation period is unknown, but is at least five years and could extend up to 20 years or longer. The diseases are invariably fatal; there is no known treatment or cure.

It is believed that vCJD may be acquired from eating food products containing the BSE agent, and there is strong epidemiologic and laboratory evidence for a causal association between vCJD and BSE.

The absence of confirmed cases of vCJD in geographic areas free of BSE supports a causal association. BSE and vCJD have never been identified in the United States.

BSE among cattle was first described in the U.K. in November 1986. Epidemiological evidence established that the outbreak of BSE was related to the production and use over many years of contaminated meat-and-bone meal. The source of the BSE outbreak is uncertain.

There is strong evidence and general agreement that the outbreak was amplified by feeding rendered bovine meat-and-bone meal to young calves.

The vast majority of BSE cases have been reported in the U.K. Through November 2000, about 177,500 cases of BSE have been confirmed there in more than 35,000 herds of cattle. The U.K. epidemic peaked in January 1993 at nearly 1,000 new cases per week.

Surveillance in Europe has also led to the identification of cases of BSE in Belgium, Denmark, France, Ireland, Liechtenstein, the Netherlands, Portugal and Switzerland and, most recently, in Germany, Spain and Italy.

From 1995 through early December 2000, 88 human cases of vCJD were reported in the U.K, three in France and one in Ireland.

European countries have instituted a variety of public health control measures, such as BSE surveillance, the culling of sick animals, the banning of specified risk materials (SRMs), or a combination of these, to prevent potentially BSE-infected tissues from entering the human food chain. Due to its early outbreak, the most stringent of these measures have been applied in the U.K. In June 2000, the European Union Commission on Food Safety and Animal Welfare adopted a decision requiring all member states to remove SRMs from the animal feed and human food chains as of October 1, 2000; such bans had already been instituted in most member states.

Source: http://www.hhs.gov/news/press/2001pres/01fsbse.html


Note: The above information was found on
Cattle Network.com:

Beef Library: Background On BSE & vCJD


5 posted on 04/12/2008 5:52:56 PM PDT by bd476
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To: bd476

mad cow disease and

the clintons

just don’t go away!


7 posted on 04/12/2008 8:37:43 PM PDT by ken21 ( people die + you never ,hear from them again.)
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To: bd476
I'm guessing it's CJD because as your link states:

At least 200 cases of variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease have been reported worldwide since 1996. Three cases have been reported in U.S. residents, and they were all exposed outside the country, Remley said...

I'm not even certain that statistic (3 in US) is accurate, as I only recall the one person, the lady in FL that had eaten the British BSE meat. However, it is quite premature at this point to conclude that she developed vCJD. Much more likely she developed CJD.

A neighbor of ours developed CJD and of course died from it. She was elderly and they had just finished building a beautiful house which her husband subsequently sold and moved away.

13 posted on 04/13/2008 5:31:08 AM PDT by prairiebreeze (I am a proud supporter of Israel.)
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To: bd476
I'm betting it's not the vCJD. These figs are for Britain since I found them first....

CJD Figures 1990-Apr 2008

Note the decline in vCJD.

20 posted on 04/13/2008 7:01:30 AM PDT by mewzilla (In politics the middle way is none at all. John Adams)
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To: bd476

Did she eat any venison?


27 posted on 04/13/2008 2:34:53 PM PDT by Perdogg (Reagan would have never said "She's my girl")
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