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 | | From: | bcpg at canada.com | | Subject: | Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | 21 Jan 2005 12:57:43 -0800 |
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 | Could Prions Be In Milk And Dairy? - Yes What Animal Products Are Free Of Prions? ECureMe.com 12-6-2
Many consumers have become aware of at least some of these compelling statistics regarding prion-related diseases. This has naturally prompted questions as to which animal products present risk to humans. Most of the focus of late has been on beef, which is warranted. Although organ tissue carries the greatest risk, animal studies do suggest that meat (from animal muscle alone) can transmit prion-related diseases.47 This is not surprising since muscle is interlaced with lymph and nervous tissue--two tissues known to be infected with BSE.48 However, we cannot exclude the possibility that milk may also carry disease-inducing prions. Many may recall how some years ago assurances were given that a mother could not pass HIV to her child by nursing.49 Of course, we now know that HIV can be transmitted in breast milk.50
Granted, prion diseases are vastly different from HIV. The risk from milk does appear to be much smaller than from eating beef or cattle organ tissues. Nonetheless, a British BSE expert has pointed out that at least one human case suggests passage of prions in milk. A Japanese woman dying of CJD was found to have the infectious agent in her colostrum (the type of breast milk made in the initial days following delivery).51 Milk has been under suspicion in established medical circles. It was one of the products targeted when the United Kingdom was beginning to recognize the magnitude of the mad cow problem. The action taken against milk by the British government is explained in Figure 11: Milk from BSE Infected Cattle is Banned.52
Both humans and animals were banned from consuming an infected cow's milk. Unfortunately, as we have already noted, animals are infected with the BSE prion long before they manifest any symptoms. When infected symptom-free cows are milked, their milk is mixed in collection tanks with milk from healthy cows. If the prion is present in milk, it could theoretically contaminate the whole collection tank. Pasteurization cannot destroy prions, so that process provides no consolation. Although at this time it cannot be stated for certain that milk can transmit a prion-related disease, many are wondering: is it worth taking the chance?
Eating the flesh of animals other than cows or drinking their milk may not be safe either. These other animals may also be infected with prion-related diseases. As already mentioned, some 20 animal species, including sheep and goats, can become infected with the transmissible spongiform encephalopathies. Suspicions are also raised concerning products made from animal glands. Health food stores often feature a variety of supplements that include glandular extracts. These agents appear to have a higher risk of prion contamination and thus I think it is prudent to avoid them.
References 47 Dealler S, Lacey R. Beef and bovine spongiform encephalopathy: the risk persists. Nutr Health 1991;7(3):117-133.
48 Groschup MH, Weiland F, Pfaff E "Detection of scrapie agent in the peripheral nervous system of diseased sheep." Goettingen prion meeting November 1995 http://www.airtime.co.uk/bse/intm.htm
49 Jelliffe DB, Jelliffe EF. HIV and breastmilk: non-proven alarmism. J Trop Pediatr 1988 Aug;34(4):142.
50 US Dept. Of Health and Human Services. Managing Early HIV Infection Quick Reference Guide for Clinicians: Number 7. AHCPR Publication No. 94-0573, January 1994 p. 14.
51 Tamai Y, Kojima H, et al. Demonstration of the transmissible agent in tissue from a pregnant woman with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. N Engl J Med 1992 Aug 27;327(9):649.
52 Pratt K. Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy. Fact sheet. Animal and Plant Health Inspection Services (APHIS). U.S. Department of Agriculture, 1991Jul p. 1.
Notice of Credit The article above is compliments of the Uchee Pines Institute, Seale, Alabama, a teaching and treatment facility devoted to natural remedies. For mor information, call 334-855-4781,e-mail: ucheepine@csi.com, or visit their Website: http://www.ucheepines.org.
http://www.ecureme.com/emyhealth/natural/n_animal_diseases7.asp
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 | | From: | Oz | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 08:36:44 +0000 |
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 | Scented Nectar writes >The EU bans anyone from using the milk from >any animal that has a TSE, even when it's just >scrapie. Here is a ProMed post about it. It's >also interesting that they think a goat may have >developed BSE. Why do they ban the milk if >it's not a possible risk?
Its worth remembering that the modern diagnostics tests apply to dead animals in the main. Its also worth remembering that the uk had some 180,000 clinical cases of BSE (mostly in dairy cows). So in practice milk from infected cows was drunk by the general population.
Its worth noting that milk was not infectious when inoculated into the brains of susceptible mice.
Its also worth noting that as a matter of fact my family and myself drunk untreated milk from pre-clinical bse cows. We had 13 cases, some of whom incubated the disease for some 9 years before succumbing.
I posted elsewhere
=================== Er, let's just get this in perspective....
The UK had 200,000 cases of clinical BSE in cattle. Its estimated that 500,000 - 1M preclinical BSE infected cattle were eaten by the UK population (these would have been positive on modern testing).
There have been about 120 cases of vCJD in the UK, and the number is now slowly decreasing. Approximately 20 people a year died of this out of a population of 60M.
And you stupid americans get in a fluster because you find a couple of pre-clinical bse cases? Really, you are so mindless.
http://www.statistics.gov.uk/downloads/theme_health/Dh2_29/DH2No29.pdf
In 2002, deaths in the UK: 540,000 deaths 16,000 died from poisoning or injury 3,000 from traffic accidents 2,500 from falls (100 from falls involving bed) 20-odd from vCJD
So try very hard not to run around like headless chickens. ====================
-- Oz
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 | | From: | usual suspect | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 15:48:37 GMT |
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 | Oz wrote: <...> > And you stupid americans get in a fluster because you find a couple of > pre-clinical bse cases? Really, you are so mindless.
She's *Canadian*.
> http://www.statistics.gov.uk/downloads/theme_health/Dh2_29/DH2No29.pdf > > In 2002, deaths in the UK: > 540,000 deaths > 16,000 died from poisoning or injury > 3,000 from traffic accidents > 2,500 from falls (100 from falls involving bed) > 20-odd from vCJD > > So try very hard not to run around like headless chickens.
But that's her specialty.
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 | | From: | Jim Webster | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 16:06:07 -0000 |
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 | "usual suspect" wrote in message news:pBuId.59575$Z%.31704@fe1.texas.rr.com... > Oz wrote: > <...> > > And you stupid americans get in a fluster because you find a couple of > > pre-clinical bse cases? Really, you are so mindless. > > She's *Canadian*. > she used to claim to be Irish
Jim Webster
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 | | From: | usual suspect | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 16:24:52 GMT |
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 | Jim Webster wrote: <...> >>>And you stupid americans get in a fluster because you find a couple of >>>pre-clinical bse cases? Really, you are so mindless. >> >>She's *Canadian*. > > she used to claim to be Irish
That was in reference to Scented Nectar, not ~~peril~~. Lesley (pearl) also claims to be Jewish, a skinhead, and an engineering school drop out. I'm sure you're aware of her beliefs that the earth is hollow and a gang of enlightened beings live beneath Mount Shasta, California. Strange little woman.
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 | | From: | Jim Webster | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 17:21:54 -0000 |
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 | "usual suspect" wrote in message news:o7vId.42661$_56.32002@fe2.texas.rr.com... > Jim Webster wrote: > <...> > >>>And you stupid americans get in a fluster because you find a couple of > >>>pre-clinical bse cases? Really, you are so mindless. > >> > >>She's *Canadian*. > > > > she used to claim to be Irish > > That was in reference to Scented Nectar, not ~~peril~~. Lesley (pearl) > also claims to be Jewish, a skinhead, and an engineering school drop > out. I'm sure you're aware of her beliefs that the earth is hollow and a > gang of enlightened beings live beneath Mount Shasta, California. > Strange little woman.
yes, I was the one who pointed out to her that Mount Shasta does a lot of winter sports and skiing
Jim Webster
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 | | From: | pearl | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sun, 23 Jan 2005 13:12:58 -0000 |
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 | "usual suspect" wrote in message news:o7vId.42661$_56.32002@fe2.texas.rr.com... > Jim Webster wrote: > <...> > >>>And you stupid americans get in a fluster because you find a couple of > >>>pre-clinical bse cases? Really, you are so mindless. > >> > >>She's *Canadian*.
usual liar is Texan.
> > she used to claim to be Irish > > That was in reference to Scented Nectar, not ~~peril~~. Lesley (pearl) > also claims to be Jewish,
True.
> a skinhead,
Lie #1.
> and an engineering school drop out.
Lie #2.
> I'm sure you're aware of her beliefs that the earth is hollow
You snipped the question;
"When does a spherical object 'ring like a bell'".
Why?
> and a > gang of enlightened beings live beneath Mount Shasta, California.
Found a photograph similar to the one here yet, suspect? http://www.anomalies-unlimited.com/OddPics/Shasta.html
> Strange little woman.
Sad little man.
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 | | From: | Jim Webster | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 09:10:51 -0000 |
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 | "Oz" wrote in message http://www.statistics.gov.uk/downloads/theme_health/Dh2_29/DH2No29.pdf > > In 2002, deaths in the UK: > 540,000 deaths > 16,000 died from poisoning or injury > 3,000 from traffic accidents > 2,500 from falls (100 from falls involving bed) > 20-odd from vCJD > > So try very hard not to run around like headless chickens. > ====================
Oz, you are cruel. There they are trying to whip up a nice bit of hysteria, ride a few old hobby horses and really enjoy themselves by scaring themselves witless over something that they know to be irrelevent, and you come along and spoil it.
Jim Webster
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 | | From: | Oz | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 08:39:28 +0000 |
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 | Jim Webster writes
>The fact that many tens of thousands of cattle in the UK have had the >disease
About 200,000 confirmed positive cases in cattle.
Most estimates suggest about 1,000,000 cattle in total were infected.
>but so few people have been infected show the level of risk that the >US has to face
Typical yanks, just can't bear to find they have only a teeny weeny insignificant infection and try to talk it up mindlessly....
-- Oz
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 | | From: | Abner Hale | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | 21 Jan 2005 19:53:36 -0800 |
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 | banmilk@hotmail.com wrote: > Not So. > > You are no expert on TSEs. You are no expert on anything, you fat stupid git.
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 | | From: | Oz | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 15:56:53 +0000 |
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 | usual suspect writes >Oz wrote: ><...> >> And you stupid americans get in a fluster because you find a couple of >> pre-clinical bse cases? Really, you are so mindless. > >She's *Canadian*.
unnnagth?
Oh, so she is....
Just goes to show .....
-- Oz
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 | | From: | usual suspect | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Fri, 21 Jan 2005 22:14:01 GMT |
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 | some stupid scaremonger wrote: > Could Prions Be In Milk > And Dairy?
No.
> What Animal Products Are Free Of Prions?
Plenty.
> Many consumers have become aware of at least some of these compelling
NOT compelling.
> statistics regarding prion-related diseases. This has naturally > prompted questions as to which animal products present risk to humans.
Most of them are.
> Most of the focus of late has been on beef, which is warranted.
Marginally warranted. Experts predicted that everyone in the UK would be shaking and babbling incoherently by now. With the exceptions of Ray Slater and George Michael, they seem to be fine. There was no epidemic. Researchers are now downgrading their projections.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/1620289.stm http://www.foodnavigator.com/news/news.asp?id=7656
<...> > Granted, prion diseases are vastly different from HIV.
THEN WHY RAISE SUCH COMPARISONS, IDIOT?
> The risk from > milk does appear to be much smaller than from eating beef or cattle > organ tissues. Nonetheless, a British BSE expert has pointed out that > at least one human case suggests passage of prions in milk.
ONE case does not an epidemic make.
> A Japanese > woman dying of CJD was found to have the infectious agent in her > colostrum (the type of breast milk made in the initial days following > delivery).
Prions in *HER* milk doesn't demonstrate that consumption of BOVINE DAIRY PRODUCTS is a means of transmission of a TSE. Idiot.
<...> > Eating the flesh of animals other than cows or drinking their milk may > not be safe either. These other animals may also be infected with > prion-related diseases. As already mentioned, some 20 animal species, > including sheep and goats, can become infected with the transmissible > spongiform encephalopathies.
Scrapie, the TSE which affects sheep and goats, is NOT transmissible to humans.
There is no scientific evidence to indicate that scrapie poses a risk to human health. There is no epidemiologic evidence that scrapie of sheep and goats is transmitted to humans, such as through contact on the farm, at slaughter plants, or butcher shops. http://www.aphis.usda.gov/lpa/pubs/fsheet_faq_notice/fs_ahscrapie.html
Scrapie is *specific* to sheep and goats. Scrapie does not infect humans. We've lived with scrapie for almost 300 years. It was the first known TSE, first described in 1730: http://w3.aces.uiuc.edu/AnSci/BSE/Index_Timeline.htm
Stop peddling MISINFORMATION and DISINFORMATION. Milk is safe. So is goat meat. So is lamb.
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 | | From: | Scented Nectar | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Fri, 21 Jan 2005 21:50:15 -0500 |
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 | The EU bans anyone from using the milk from any animal that has a TSE, even when it's just scrapie. Here is a ProMed post about it. It's also interesting that they think a goat may have developed BSE. Why do they ban the milk if it's not a possible risk?
-- SN http://www.scentednectar.com/veg/ A huge directory listing over 700 veg recipe sites. Has a fun 'Jump to a Random Link' button.
TSE, GOATS - EU: 1ST SEMESTER, 2004 ******************************* A ProMED-mail post
ProMED-mail is a program of the International Society for Infectious Diseases
Date: Wed 19 Jan 2005 From: ProMED-mail Source: Kathimerini, Athens, 19 Jan 2005 [edited] 5_51930>
Brain disease in Greek goats ----------------------------- 12 Greek goats were found to be suffering from the brain-wasting disease scrapie in the 1st half of 2004, EU figures that were made public yesterday [18 Jan 2005] revealed.
The data, issued by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA), show that 12 cases of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSE) were discovered in Greece, 8 in Cyprus and 26 in France out of some 17 294 goats tested throughout the EU in 2004 [Apparently, these figures refer to the 1st semester of 2004. - Mod.AS]. The figures were made public by Left Coalition Synaspismos MEP Dimitris Papadopoulos.
Meanwhile, tests are continuing in the case of a French goat slaughtered in 2002, which experts think may have developed BSE [See comment]. The EU bans the use of milk and meat from herds affected by a TSE case.
-- ProMED-mail
[The results of tests in goats for TSE's, during the 1st semester of 2004, are presented in table form, available at 04_en.pdf>. The figures are arranged in 4 groups: "Eradication"; "Risk animals" (mostly, animals found dead on farms; also some emergency slaughtered animals and animals with clinical signs during ante-mortem inspection in slaughterhouses); "Healthy animals" (Healthy animals subject to normal slaughter) and "TSE suspects" (Animals reported as TSE clinical suspect).
Positive and pending cases have been reported in the following countries: Greece: 12 positive, 0 pending. (All positives were TSE suspects). Spain: 0 positive, 2 pending (in "risk animals"). Portugal: 0 positive, 48 pending (3 in "risk animals," 45 in "healthy animals"). Cyprus: 8 positive, 0 pending. (All the positives in "risk animals").
The total number of adult goats in EU's 25 member countries is about 9.5 million, compared with 66 million adult sheep. The leading goat breeding countries are (millions of adult animals): Greece (3.9), Spain (2.33), France (1.03), Italy (0.82), Portugal (0.39), Cyprus (0.3) and Netherlands (0.2).
On 30 Nov 2004, EU's Spongiform Encephalopathy Advisory Committee (SEAC) was informed that a definitive interpretation of the French data on a goat suspected of BSE could not be provided by the Community Reference Laboratory (CRL) for TSEs (based in Weybridge, England) until further data from mouse bioassays were available in about 2 months. Those results are anticipated with great interest. - Mod.AS]
[see also: 2004 ---- BSE, goats - France 2002 (03): susp 20041211.3279 BSE, goats - France 2002 (02): susp 20041119.3097 BSE, goats - France 2002: susp. 20041030.2929 Scrapie, atypical, sheep - UK and Ireland 20041210.3274] ................mpp/arn/msp/mpp
*##########################################################* ************************************************************ ProMED-mail makes every effort to verify the reports that are posted, but the accuracy and completeness of the information, and of any statements or opinions based thereon, are not guaranteed. The reader assumes all risks in using information posted or archived by ProMED-mail. ISID and its associated service providers shall not be held responsible for errors or omissions or held liable for any damages incurred as a result of use or reliance upon posted or archived material. ************************************************************ Visit ProMED-mail's web site at . Send all items for posting to: promed@promedmail.org (NOT to an individual moderator). If you do not give your full name and affiliation, it may not be posted. Send commands to subscribe/unsubscribe, get archives, help, etc. to: majordomo@promedmail.org. For assistance from a human being send mail to: owner-promed@promedmail.org. ############################################################ ############################################################
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 | | From: | Jim Webster | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 07:44:50 -0000 |
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 | "Scented Nectar" wrote in message news:WoWdnU2nRNJuI2zcRVn-jA@rogers.com... > The EU bans anyone from using the milk from > any animal that has a TSE, even when it's just > scrapie. Here is a ProMed post about it. It's > also interesting that they think a goat may have > developed BSE. Why do they ban the milk if > it's not a possible risk?
just because the EU bans something doesn't mean that there is a known risk. It is banned basically as a PR issue. Also from a technical point, by the time it is obvious an animal has BSE she is impossible to milk, it is too dangerous for the chap doing it. Prior to that, while she has BSE but it is undiagnosed, the milk does go for human consumption.
The fact that many tens of thousands of cattle in the UK have had the disease but so few people have been infected show the level of risk that the US has to face
Jim Webster
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 | | From: | pearl | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 14:47:29 -0000 |
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 | "Jim Webster" wrote in message news:cst0c2$mq1$4@newsg2.svr.pol.co.uk...
> The fact that many tens of thousands of cattle in the UK have had the > disease but so few people have been infected show the level of risk that the > US has to face
' People who develop CJD from eating mad-cow-contaminated beef have been thought to develop a specific form of the disorder called variant CJD. But new research (see reference at the end of part [1] above) indicates the mad cow pathogen can cause both sporadic CJD and the variant form. "Now people are beginning to realize that because something looks like sporadic CJD they can't necessarily conclude that it's not linked to (mad cow disease)," said Laura Manuelidis, Section Chief of Surgery in the Neuropathology Department at Yale University, who conducted a 1989 study that found 13 percent of Alzheimer's patients actually had CJD. Several studies, including the one by Manuelidis, have found autopsies reveal 3-13 percent of patients diagnosed with Alzheimer's or dementia actually suffered from CJD. Those numbers might sound low, but there are 4 million Alzheimer's cases and hundreds of thousands of dementia cases in the United States. A small percentage of those cases could add up to 120 000 or more CJD victims going undetected and not included in official statistics.
At the same time autopsies have been declining, the number of deaths attributed to Alzheimer's has increased more than 50-fold since 1979, going from 857 deaths then to nearly 50 000 in 2000. Though it is unlikely that the dramatic increase in Alzheimer's is due entirely to misdiagnosed CJD cases, it "could explain some of the increase we've seen," Manuelidis said. ....' http://foodhaccp.com/msgboard.mv?parm_func=showmsg+parm_msgnum=1012907
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 | | From: | usual suspect | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 16:01:22 GMT |
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 | ~~peril~~ wrote: <...> > At the same time autopsies have been declining, the number of deaths > attributed to Alzheimer's has increased more than 50-fold since 1979,
Where's the epidemic, Lesley?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/1620289.stm http://www.foodnavigator.com/news/news.asp?id=7656
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 | | From: | pearl | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sun, 23 Jan 2005 12:50:52 -0000 |
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 | "usual suspect" wrote in message news:mNuId.42655$_56.5499@fe2.texas.rr.com... > ~~peril~~ wrote: > <...> > > At the same time autopsies have been declining, the number of deaths > > attributed to Alzheimer's has increased more than 50-fold since 1979, > > Where's the epidemic,
http://www.alzheimers.org.uk/News_and_Campaigns/Policy_Watch/demography.htm
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 | | From: | Jim Webster | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sun, 23 Jan 2005 14:20:46 -0000 |
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 | "pearl" wrote in message news:ct0799$q36$1@kermit.esat.net... > "usual suspect" wrote in message news:mNuId.42655$_56.5499@fe2.texas.rr.com... > > ~~peril~~ wrote: > > <...> > > > At the same time autopsies have been declining, the number of deaths > > > attributed to Alzheimer's has increased more than 50-fold since 1979, > > > > Where's the epidemic, > > http://www.alzheimers.org.uk/News_and_Campaigns/Policy_Watch/demography.htm
read the page before posting it. All it points out is there will be an increase because the population of older people is increasing
"It is estimated that by 2010 there will be about 870,000 people with dementia in the UK This is expected to rise to over 1.8 million people with dementia by 2050. Many people talk about the 'demographic time bomb' or 'tidal wave' of older people which the state cannot afford to cater for. The Society believes that this is misleading. A steady, rather than dramatic growth is expected over the next 25 years. The Society's contribution to the Royal Commission on Long Term Care highlights the belief that the state can provide for people's needs as they age. The use of phrases such as the demographic time bomb, or the view that older people are a burden on our society, does not encourage the view that a sustainable system can be developed. "
It is always worth checking web pages pearl/lotus quotes, they are a most amazing selection and regularly disprove her argument
Jim Webster
> >
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 | | From: | Jim Webster | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 15:54:44 -0000 |
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"pearl" wrote in message news:cstpo8$ubq$1@kermit.esat.net... > "Jim Webster" wrote in message news:cst0c2$mq1$4@newsg2.svr.pol.co.uk... > > > The fact that many tens of thousands of cattle in the UK have had the > > disease but so few people have been infected show the level of risk that the > > US has to face > > ' People who develop CJD from eating mad-cow-contaminated beef > have been thought to develop a specific form of the disorder called > variant CJD. But new research (see reference at the end of part [1] above) > indicates the mad cow pathogen can cause both sporadic CJD and the > variant form. "Now people are beginning to realize that because something > looks like sporadic CJD they can't necessarily conclude that it's not linked > to (mad cow disease)," said Laura Manuelidis, Section Chief of Surgery in > the Neuropathology Department at Yale University, who conducted a > 1989 study that found 13 percent of Alzheimer's patients actually had CJD. > Several studies, including the one by Manuelidis, have found autopsies > reveal 3-13 percent of patients diagnosed with Alzheimer's or dementia > actually suffered from CJD. Those numbers might sound low, but there > are 4 million Alzheimer's cases and hundreds of thousands of dementia > cases in the United States. A small percentage of those cases could add > up to 120 000 or more CJD victims going undetected and not included > in official statistics. > > At the same time autopsies have been declining, the number of deaths > attributed to Alzheimer's has increased more than 50-fold since 1979, > going from 857 deaths then to nearly 50 000 in 2000. Though it is > unlikely that the dramatic increase in Alzheimer's is due entirely to > misdiagnosed CJD cases, it "could explain some of the increase we've > seen," Manuelidis said. > ...' > http://foodhaccp.com/msgboard.mv?parm_func=showmsg+parm_msgnum=1012907 >
sorry pearl, but no matter how many crap references you come up with, you cannot come up with any evidence that matters. Howl up a really good health scare if you like, but you just end up looking like an idiot. In the UK we had over 180,000 clinical BSE cases in cows, the vast majority milk cows, and the vast majority of them milking for human consumption before they were diagnosed. The best estimates are that somewhere between 200,000 and 500,000 animals were eaten by people with no precautions taken at all Hey and we had 120 cases of nvCJD. What the Americans have to worry about is shroud waving idiots who have their own research budgets to finance, desperate to whip up a health scare to get funding. The money is better spent on something useful
Jim Webster
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 | | From: | pearl | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sun, 23 Jan 2005 12:51:54 -0000 |
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 | "Jim Webster" wrote in message news:cstt4m$ddi$1@newsg1.svr.pol.co.uk... > > > "pearl" wrote in message > news:cstpo8$ubq$1@kermit.esat.net... > > "Jim Webster" wrote in message > news:cst0c2$mq1$4@newsg2.svr.pol.co.uk... > > > > > The fact that many tens of thousands of cattle in the UK have had the > > > disease but so few people have been infected show the level of risk that the > > > US has to face > > > > ' People who develop CJD from eating mad-cow-contaminated beef > > have been thought to develop a specific form of the disorder called > > variant CJD. But new research (see reference at the end of part [1] above) > > indicates the mad cow pathogen can cause both sporadic CJD and the > > variant form. "Now people are beginning to realize that because something > > looks like sporadic CJD they can't necessarily conclude that it's not linked > > to (mad cow disease)," said Laura Manuelidis, Section Chief of Surgery in > > the Neuropathology Department at Yale University, who conducted a > > 1989 study that found 13 percent of Alzheimer's patients actually had CJD. > > Several studies, including the one by Manuelidis, have found autopsies > > reveal 3-13 percent of patients diagnosed with Alzheimer's or dementia > > actually suffered from CJD. Those numbers might sound low, but there > > are 4 million Alzheimer's cases and hundreds of thousands of dementia > > cases in the United States. A small percentage of those cases could add > > up to 120 000 or more CJD victims going undetected and not included > > in official statistics. > > > > At the same time autopsies have been declining, the number of deaths > > attributed to Alzheimer's has increased more than 50-fold since 1979, > > going from 857 deaths then to nearly 50 000 in 2000. Though it is > > unlikely that the dramatic increase in Alzheimer's is due entirely to > > misdiagnosed CJD cases, it "could explain some of the increase we've > > seen," Manuelidis said. > > ...' > > http://foodhaccp.com/msgboard.mv?parm_func=showmsg+parm_msgnum=1012907 > > > > sorry pearl,
You will be.
> but no matter how many crap references you come up with, you > cannot come up with any evidence that matters. Howl up a really good health > scare if you like, but you just end up looking like an idiot. In the UK we > had over 180,000 clinical BSE cases in cows, the vast majority milk cows, > and the vast majority of them milking for human consumption before they were > diagnosed. The best estimates are that somewhere between 200,000 and 500,000 > animals were eaten by people with no precautions taken at all > Hey and we had 120 cases of nvCJD. > What the Americans have to worry about is shroud waving idiots who have > their own research budgets to finance, desperate to whip up a health scare > to get funding. > The money is better spent on something useful > > Jim Webster > >
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 | | From: | pearl | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sun, 23 Jan 2005 13:19:35 -0000 |
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 | "pearl" wrote in message news:ct07b6$q3f$1@kermit.esat.net... > "Jim Webster" wrote in message news:cstt4m$ddi$1@newsg1.svr.pol.co.uk... > > > > > > "pearl" wrote in message > > news:cstpo8$ubq$1@kermit.esat.net... > > > "Jim Webster" wrote in message > > news:cst0c2$mq1$4@newsg2.svr.pol.co.uk... > > > > > > > The fact that many tens of thousands of cattle in the UK have had the > > > > disease but so few people have been infected show the level of risk that the > > > > US has to face > > > > > > ' People who develop CJD from eating mad-cow-contaminated beef > > > have been thought to develop a specific form of the disorder called > > > variant CJD. But new research (see reference at the end of part [1] above) > > > indicates the mad cow pathogen can cause both sporadic CJD and the > > > variant form. "Now people are beginning to realize that because something > > > looks like sporadic CJD they can't necessarily conclude that it's not linked > > > to (mad cow disease)," said Laura Manuelidis, Section Chief of Surgery in > > > the Neuropathology Department at Yale University, who conducted a > > > 1989 study that found 13 percent of Alzheimer's patients actually had CJD. > > > Several studies, including the one by Manuelidis, have found autopsies > > > reveal 3-13 percent of patients diagnosed with Alzheimer's or dementia > > > actually suffered from CJD. Those numbers might sound low, but there > > > are 4 million Alzheimer's cases and hundreds of thousands of dementia > > > cases in the United States. A small percentage of those cases could add > > > up to 120 000 or more CJD victims going undetected and not included > > > in official statistics. > > > > > > At the same time autopsies have been declining, the number of deaths > > > attributed to Alzheimer's has increased more than 50-fold since 1979, > > > going from 857 deaths then to nearly 50 000 in 2000. Though it is > > > unlikely that the dramatic increase in Alzheimer's is due entirely to > > > misdiagnosed CJD cases, it "could explain some of the increase we've > > > seen," Manuelidis said. > > > ...' > > > http://foodhaccp.com/msgboard.mv?parm_func=showmsg+parm_msgnum=1012907 > > > > > > > sorry pearl, > > You will be.
That comes across as a threat,- which is not intended.
Read as 'You should be'.
> > but no matter how many crap references you come up with, you > > cannot come up with any evidence that matters. Howl up a really good health > > scare if you like, but you just end up looking like an idiot. In the UK we > > had over 180,000 clinical BSE cases in cows, the vast majority milk cows, > > and the vast majority of them milking for human consumption before they were > > diagnosed. The best estimates are that somewhere between 200,000 and 500,000 > > animals were eaten by people with no precautions taken at all > > Hey and we had 120 cases of nvCJD. > > What the Americans have to worry about is shroud waving idiots who have > > their own research budgets to finance, desperate to whip up a health scare > > to get funding. > > The money is better spent on something useful > > > > Jim Webster > > > > > >
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 | | From: | Jim Webster | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sun, 23 Jan 2005 14:12:31 -0000 |
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 | "pearl" wrote in message news:ct08v3$qju$1@kermit.esat.net... > "pearl" wrote in message news:ct07b6$q3f$1@kermit.esat.net... > > "Jim Webster" wrote in message news:cstt4m$ddi$1@newsg1.svr.pol.co.uk... > > > > > > > > > "pearl" wrote in message > > > news:cstpo8$ubq$1@kermit.esat.net... > > > > "Jim Webster" wrote in message > > > news:cst0c2$mq1$4@newsg2.svr.pol.co.uk... > > > > > > > > > The fact that many tens of thousands of cattle in the UK have had the > > > > > disease but so few people have been infected show the level of risk that the > > > > > US has to face > > > > > > > > ' People who develop CJD from eating mad-cow-contaminated beef > > > > have been thought to develop a specific form of the disorder called > > > > variant CJD. But new research (see reference at the end of part [1] above) > > > > indicates the mad cow pathogen can cause both sporadic CJD and the > > > > variant form. "Now people are beginning to realize that because something > > > > looks like sporadic CJD they can't necessarily conclude that it's not linked > > > > to (mad cow disease)," said Laura Manuelidis, Section Chief of Surgery in > > > > the Neuropathology Department at Yale University, who conducted a > > > > 1989 study that found 13 percent of Alzheimer's patients actually had CJD. > > > > Several studies, including the one by Manuelidis, have found autopsies > > > > reveal 3-13 percent of patients diagnosed with Alzheimer's or dementia > > > > actually suffered from CJD. Those numbers might sound low, but there > > > > are 4 million Alzheimer's cases and hundreds of thousands of dementia > > > > cases in the United States. A small percentage of those cases could add > > > > up to 120 000 or more CJD victims going undetected and not included > > > > in official statistics. > > > > > > > > At the same time autopsies have been declining, the number of deaths > > > > attributed to Alzheimer's has increased more than 50-fold since 1979, > > > > going from 857 deaths then to nearly 50 000 in 2000. Though it is > > > > unlikely that the dramatic increase in Alzheimer's is due entirely to > > > > misdiagnosed CJD cases, it "could explain some of the increase we've > > > > seen," Manuelidis said. > > > > ...' > > > > http://foodhaccp.com/msgboard.mv?parm_func=showmsg+parm_msgnum=1012907 > > > > > > > > > > sorry pearl, > > > > You will be. > > That comes across as a threat,- which is not intended. > > Read as 'You should be'. >
why should I be sorry that you continue to display a singular ignorance of reality and persist in posting discredited or outdated websites?
You have been saying we will be sorry about nvCJD for several years and the numbers of people suffering has been falling steadily and the estimates, previously in millions, are struggling to reach a thousand You are going to have to find something else to get hysterical over Jim Webster
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 | | From: | usual suspect | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 15:40:02 GMT |
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 | Stupid Nectar wrote: > The EU bans anyone from using the milk from > any animal that has a TSE, even when it's just > scrapie. Here is a ProMed post about it.
Stop putting entire articles in your sig file, idiot.
> It's > also interesting that they think a goat may have > developed BSE.
No, it tested for an atypical strain of TSE. That doesn't mean it has BSE, it could just be a variant of scrapie.
The sample came from a goat aged two and a half years when it was slaughtered in 2002. This goat was the only animal affected in its herd of origin, which totalled 600 animals (300 adult goats in production and 300 young goats). The whole herd was culled and all the adult goats were tested at that time, with negative results. All the carcasses, including that of the affected goat, were destroyed....
[T]he tentative diagnosis is not all that unusual. There are several "atypical" TSE cases reported and under investigation around the world in sheep and goats. Since there are really no "standards" for diagnosing BSE in anything other than a bovine, atypical case tissue is being placed into mice for further diagnostic work. http://www.boergoats.com/clean/articleads.php?art=610
> Why do they ban the milk if > it's not a possible risk?
For the same reason entire herds are culled rather than those which actually have a TSE: to ease public concerns and restore confidence in food safety. Ask your ranchers out in Alberta about that sometime. Even one isolated instance can cripple an entire industry.
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/1105531380871_57/?hub=TopStories
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 | | From: | Scented Nectar | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 11:14:15 -0500 |
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 | > > The EU bans anyone from using the milk from > > any animal that has a TSE, even when it's just > > scrapie. Here is a ProMed post about it. > > Stop putting entire articles in your sig file, idiot.
The article was posted below my sig. Is that a crime? Does that hurt you somehow? You sound so whiney and cranky.
> > It's > > also interesting that they think a goat may have > > developed BSE. > > No, it tested for an atypical strain of TSE. That doesn't mean it has > BSE, it could just be a variant of scrapie.
Actually the test they are awaiting results on IS testing for BSE not scrapies.
> [T]he tentative diagnosis is not all that unusual. There are > several "atypical" TSE cases reported and under investigation > around the world in sheep and goats. Since there are really no > "standards" for diagnosing BSE in anything other than a bovine, > atypical case tissue is being placed into mice for further > diagnostic work. > http://www.boergoats.com/clean/articleads.php?art=610
The mice testing is what they are awaiting results on. This IS a nonbovine way to test for it. The 'further diagnostic work' is what they're doing already.
-- SN http://www.scentednectar.com/veg/ A huge directory listing over 700 veg recipe sites. Has a fun 'Jump to a Random Link' button.
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 | | From: | pearl | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 14:47:14 -0000 |
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 | "usual suspect" wrote in message news:J8fId.40527$_56.31800@fe2.texas.rr.com... > Scrapie, the TSE which affects sheep and goats, is NOT transmissible to > humans.
'New research by Professor Stanley Prusiner strongly suggests that the infective prion agent that causes BSE is found in sheep but at levels which have, until now, been undetectable. Prusiner, professor of neurology at the University of California in San Francisco, won the the Nobel prize for discovering prions. His laboratories are among the world leaders in such research.
Last week he said: "The implication of our latest work is that BSE is endemic throughout the British national sheep flock." ....... A paper due out shortly in EMBO Journal by Raymond, Bossers, Caughey, et al. supports some aspects of Prusiner's position. The in vitro conversion test shows scrapie, BSE, and CWD have low but non-zero risks of converting human prion to the abnormal form; this has been a reliable proxy in the past. While it isn't clear yet whether the same strain of scrapie mentioned by Prusiner was among those studied, taken together it would seem that some strains of scrapie might be of special concern in regards to direct sheep scrapie to human transmission. The new data is much stronger than, and trumps, older epidemiological questionaires about scrapie and CJD that the industry has relied on. ....... http://www.mad-cow.org/00/jul00_dont_eat_sheep.html .
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 | | From: | Jim Webster | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 16:05:19 -0000 |
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 | "pearl" wrote in message news:cstpnn$ubm$1@kermit.esat.net... > "usual suspect" wrote in message news:J8fId.40527$_56.31800@fe2.texas.rr.com... > > Scrapie, the TSE which affects sheep and goats, is NOT transmissible to > > humans. > > 'New research by Professor Stanley Prusiner strongly suggests > that the infective prion agent that causes BSE is found in sheep > but at levels which have, until now, been undetectable. Prusiner, > professor of neurology at the University of California in San > Francisco, won the the Nobel prize for discovering prions. His > laboratories are among the world leaders in such research. > > Last week he said: "The implication of our latest work is that > BSE is endemic throughout the British national sheep flock." > ......
no, pearl/lotus, he didn't say it last week, you are quoting an old report, he said it during the middle of 2000
And what actually happened was that a scare was whipped up, it looked as if the entire UK sheep flock would be slaughtered, until someone admitted that they had actually used cattle brain by mistake to inject into the mice rather than sheep brain, so all their experiments had proved was that cattle that died of BSE had BSE
Please try to keep up to date and stop mendaciously quoting obsolete and discredited stories Jim Webster
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 | | From: | pearl | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sun, 23 Jan 2005 12:16:40 -0000 |
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 | "Jim Webster" wrote in message news:csttj3$t59$1@news6.svr.pol.co.uk... > > "pearl" wrote in message > news:cstpnn$ubm$1@kermit.esat.net... > > "usual suspect" wrote in message > news:J8fId.40527$_56.31800@fe2.texas.rr.com... > > > Scrapie, the TSE which affects sheep and goats, is NOT transmissible to > > > humans. > > > > 'New research by Professor Stanley Prusiner strongly suggests > > that the infective prion agent that causes BSE is found in sheep > > but at levels which have, until now, been undetectable. Prusiner, > > professor of neurology at the University of California in San > > Francisco, won the the Nobel prize for discovering prions. His > > laboratories are among the world leaders in such research. > > > > Last week he said: "The implication of our latest work is that > > BSE is endemic throughout the British national sheep flock." > > ...... > > no, pearl/lotus, he didn't say it last week, you are quoting an old report, > he said it during the middle of 2000
http://www.mad-cow.org/00/jul00_dont_eat_sheep.html
> And what actually happened was that a scare was whipped up, it looked as if > the entire UK sheep flock would be slaughtered, until someone admitted that > they had actually used cattle brain by mistake to inject into the mice > rather than sheep brain, so all their experiments had proved was that cattle > that died of BSE had BSE
NOT Prusiner,....
'The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) has admitted that testing on the wrong tissue had been carried out for the past five years. ' http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/1605959.stm
-restore-
'A paper due out shortly in EMBO Journal by Raymond, Bossers, Caughey, et al. supports some aspects of Prusiner's position. The in vitro conversion test shows scrapie, BSE, and CWD have low but non-zero risks of converting human prion to the abnormal form; this has been a reliable proxy in the past. While it isn't clear yet whether the same strain of scrapie mentioned by Prusiner was among those studied, taken together it would seem that some strains of scrapie might be of special concern in regards to direct sheep scrapie to human transmission. The new data is much stronger than, and trumps, older epidemiological questionaires about scrapie and CJD that the industry has relied on. ....... http://www.mad-cow.org/00/jul00_dont_eat_sheep.html .
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 | | From: | Jim Webster | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sun, 23 Jan 2005 14:14:04 -0000 |
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 | "pearl" wrote in message news:ct0594
The new data is much stronger than, > and trumps, older epidemiological questionaires about scrapie and > CJD that the industry has relied on. > ......
seeing as how the old reports were totally wrong, it doesn't have to be good to be better
Jim Webster
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 | | From: | pearl | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sun, 23 Jan 2005 12:45:28 -0000 |
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 | "pearl" wrote in message news:ct0594$pie$1@kermit.esat.net... ... > > > "usual suspect" wrote in message > > news:J8fId.40527$_56.31800@fe2.texas.rr.com... > > > > Scrapie, the TSE which affects sheep and goats, is NOT transmissible to > > > > humans. > > > > > > 'New research by Professor Stanley Prusiner strongly suggests > > > that the infective prion agent that causes BSE is found in sheep > > > but at levels which have, until now, been undetectable. Prusiner, > > > professor of neurology at the University of California in San > > > Francisco, won the the Nobel prize for discovering prions. His > > > laboratories are among the world leaders in such research. <..> > 'A paper due out shortly in EMBO Journal by Raymond, Bossers, > Caughey, et al. supports some aspects of Prusiner's position. The > in vitro conversion test shows scrapie, BSE, and CWD have low > but non-zero risks of converting human prion to the abnormal form; > this has been a reliable proxy in the past. While it isn't clear yet > whether the same strain of scrapie mentioned by Prusiner was > among those studied, taken together it would seem that some strains > of scrapie might be of special concern in regards to direct sheep > scrapie to human transmission. The new data is much stronger than, > and trumps, older epidemiological questionaires about scrapie and > CJD that the industry has relied on. > ...... > http://www.mad-cow.org/00/jul00_dont_eat_sheep.html .
'In 2001, a team of French researchers found, to their complete surprise, a strain of scrapie--"mad sheep" disease--that caused the same brain damage in mice as sporadic CJD.[19] "This means we cannot rule out that at least some sporadic CJD may be caused by some strains of scrapie," says team member Jean-Philippe Deslys of the French Atomic Energy Commission's medical research laboratory.[20]
Population studies had failed to show a link between CJD and lamb chops, but this French research provided an explanation why. There seem to be six types of sporadic CJD and there are more than 20 strains of scrapie. If only some sheep strains affect only some people, studies of entire populations may not clearly show the relationship. Monkeys fed infected sheep brains certainly come down with the disease.[21] Hundreds of "mad sheep" were found in the U.S. in 2003.[22] Scrapie remains such a problem in the United States that the USDA has issued a scrapie "declaration of emergency."[23] Maybe some cases of sporadic CJD in the U.S. are caused by sheep meat as well.[24] ......' http://www.commondreams.org/views04/0107-07.htm
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 | | From: | Jim Webster | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sun, 23 Jan 2005 14:14:50 -0000 |
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 | "pearl" wrote in message news:ct06v4$pu1$1@kermit.esat.net...
> > 'In 2001, a team of French researchers found, to their complete surprise, > a strain of scrapie--"mad sheep" disease--
well I suppose 2001 is more modern than 2000 but hardly cutting edge
Already discredited
Jim Webster
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 | | From: | usual suspect | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 16:00:01 GMT |
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 | ~~peril~~ wrote: >>Scrapie, the TSE which affects sheep and goats, is NOT transmissible to >>humans. > > 'New research by Professor Stanley Prusiner strongly suggests
That's 4.5 year-old statement, Calamity Lesley, NOT research. To date, his statement has not been codified for publication in any journal. Read the webmaster's opinion before you jump the gun next time: This is a first, for Prusiner to show strong public leadership on a prion public health issue. Even though the data has not yet been written up for publication, Prusiner has to be taken seriously with 358 earlier prion papers. His team must be very excited by the implications of their research to make such a statement potentially affecting 40 million sheep, though nowhere do they suggest the data is strong enough yet to mandate a cull.
The article itself starts out by saying that even if Prusiner's speculation is correct, any such risk from eating lamb or goat meat is *SMALL*. To date, there is NO evidence of scrapie being transmitted to a human through food, milk, or other physical contact. There is also NO evidence of sheep or goats carrying the actual BSE prion.
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 | | From: | pearl | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sun, 23 Jan 2005 12:32:03 -0000 |
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 | "usual suspect" wrote in message news:5MuId.42654$_56.27470@fe2.texas.rr.com... > ~~peril~~ wrote: > >>Scrapie, the TSE which affects sheep and goats, is NOT transmissible to > >>humans. > > > > 'New research by Professor Stanley Prusiner strongly suggests > > That's 4.5 year-old statement,
'The research uses "bovinised" mice in which the gene that makes prion proteins is replaced by the same gene from a cow. Such mice react to BSE prions just like a cow - but take less than 10 months to develop the disease, compared with more than three years for cows - so speeding up research. When such mice were innoculated with BSE prions the resulting disease was identical to that caused by variant CJD prions from humans - powerful evidence that the prions are the same.
By contrast, material from animals and humans with different prion diseases took longer and damaged the brain differently. The mice were then injected with material from sheep with scrapie - and again the incubation and symptoms were very close to those of BSE. This was powerful evidence that sheep can produce BSE prions. If they had died of scrapie the disease should have looked different. ....' http://www.mad-cow.org/00/jul00_dont_eat_sheep.html
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 | | From: | banmilk at hotmail.com | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | 21 Jan 2005 17:47:12 -0800 |
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 | Not So.
You are no expert on TSEs.
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 | | From: | usual suspect | | Subject: | Re: Prions in Breast Milk | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 15:23:56 GMT |
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 | banmilk@hotmail.com wrote: > Not So.
It is so.
> You are no expert on TSEs.
Are YOU? Hahaha.
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