Mad Cow may have come from human remains

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Theory: Mad cow may have come from humans

Theory: Mad cow may have come from humans

By EMMA ROSS
AP MEDICAL WRITER

LONDON -- A new theory proposes that mad cow disease may have come from feeding British cattle meal contaminated with human remains infected with a variation of the disease.

The hypothesis, outlined this week in The Lancet medical journal, suggests the infected cattle feed came from the Indian subcontinent, where bodies sometimes are ceremonially thrown into the Ganges River.

Indian experts not connected with the research pointed out weaknesses in the theory but agreed it should be investigated.

The cause of the original case or cases of mad cow disease, or bovine spongiform encephalopathy, is unknown, but it belongs to a class of illnesses called transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, or TSEs.

Such illnesses exist in several species. Scrapie is a TSE that affects sheep and goats, while chronic wasting disease afflicts elk and deer. A handful of TSEs are found in humans, including Kuru, Alper's disease and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, or CJD.

All TSEs are fatal, untreatable and undiagnosable until after death. They are called spongiform encephalopathies because the diseases involve spongy degeneration of the brain.

The disease was not known to infect cows until 1986, when the first cases were noticed in Britain. About a decade later, a new permutation of CJD, which scientists dubbed variant CJD, started showing up in people there. Experts believe this new variant came from eating beef products infected with mad cow disease.

But where the cows got the disease remains a mystery.

The most popular theory is that cattle, which are vegetarian, were fed meal containing sheep remains, passing scrapie from sheep to cows, where it eventually evolved into a cow-specific disease. Another theory is that cows just developed the disease spontaneously, without catching it from another species.

However, a pair of British scientists now proposes the origin may be the bones of people infected with classical CJD, which they theorize ended up in cattle feed imported from South Asia.

Britain imported hundreds of thousands of tons of whole bones, crushed bones and carcass parts to be used for fertilizer and animal feed during the 1960s and 1970s. Nearly half of that came from Bangladesh, India and Pakistan, said the scientists, led by Alan Colchester, a professor of neuroscience at the University of Kent in England.

"In India and Pakistan, gathering large bones and carcasses from the land and from rivers has long been an important local trade for peasants," the scientists wrote. "Collectors encounter considerable quantities of human as well as animal remains as a result of religious customs."

Hindus believe remains should be disposed of in a river, preferably the Ganges.

"The ideal is for the body to be burned, but most people cannot afford enough wood for a full cremation. ... Many complete corpses are thrown into the river," the scientists said, adding that the inclusion of human remains in animal bone material exported from the Indian subcontinent has been documented.

Britain was the main recipient of animal byproducts exported from India and Pakistan during the relevant period and was also a leader in feeding meat and bone meal to calves, they noted.

Finally, the similarities between the strains - mad cow disease, classical CJD and variant CJD - are sufficiently close to support the theory of a link among them, the authors argued.

"We do not claim that our theory is proved, but it unquestionably warrants further investigation," the scientists wrote.

Indian neuroscientists Susarla Shankar and P. Satishchandra of the National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences in Bangalore, India, agreed the theory needs to be followed up, but urged caution.

"Scientists must proceed cautiously when hypothesizing about a disease that has such wide geographical, cultural and religious implications," they wrote in a critique published in the journal.

Relatives of people who die of suspected CJD are persuaded to bury their dead or cremate them, the two said. In most hospital-related deaths, bodies are not taken to Varanasi, the holy city on the banks of the Ganges, but cremated or buried nearer to home.

"Even in Varanasi, most Hindus do not put half-burnt bodies into the river," they wrote, adding that if bodies found in the Ganges did have CJD, there should have been a major epidemic of the disease in north India.

"Facts to support or refute their hypothesis now need to be gathered with urgency and great care," the Indian scientists said.

donut gon' nut (donut), Thursday, 1 September 2005 23:55 (twenty years ago)

Soylent Green is people!

Rockist_Scientist (RSLaRue), Friday, 2 September 2005 01:04 (twenty years ago)

I'm going to the Island!

k/l (Ken L), Friday, 2 September 2005 01:13 (twenty years ago)

But do you think we cows will get any kind of apology from you antibovinist humans for this? Even after a decade-long campaign of slander, speciesism, and brutality -- all heaped upon the very victims of your horrible viral scourge? Oh, blame it on the cattle, they're mad, it's all their fault -- well the shoe is on the other foot now, and I say it's high time, too.

Cow (nabisco), Friday, 2 September 2005 14:33 (twenty years ago)

Truth behind Indian view of cow as sacred revealed.

Draw Tipsy, ya hack. (dave225.3), Friday, 2 September 2005 14:36 (twenty years ago)

As an advocate of the rights of the cow in this Taurocentric society, I'd just like to point out that the very term "Mad Cow" is an affront to everything we've worked so hard to achieve. Bovine spongal encephalopathy is a disease that afflicts both sexes, and we cows do not appreciate your misogynist British humor in labeling it "Mad Cow" disease. Spread your hate somewhere else in the animal kingdom -- maybe "Daft Bird" disease? -- because we're not standing for this anti-woman rhetoric one minute longer.

Sincerely,
Bossie
National Organization for Cows
"Take the Bull by the Horns!"

Feminist Cow (nabisco), Friday, 2 September 2005 14:38 (twenty years ago)

so the original case of human form of CJD came from... a human form of CJD?!?!?!?! DOES NOT COMPUTE!

ken c (ken c), Friday, 2 September 2005 14:40 (twenty years ago)

You said it, Bossie. The response to this disease should shame the entire first world with its insensitivity and inadequacy. This disease isn't a silent killer -- it's an epidemic. But bulls, cows, heifers: where are our leaders? What have they done to address this basic issue of public health? They'd rather turn a blind eye, and relegate this to being a "cow's issue." They'd rather laze around thinking only "dirty" cows get BSE, that their feed is always "clean," that they have nothing to worry about. And I've got news for everyone: we're all at risk.

The time for walking is over: it's time to Stampede.

Michael Horne (nabisco), Friday, 2 September 2005 14:44 (twenty years ago)

yeah innit you humans are always like that, when you have the same disease as us it's always because we're BAD cows and infected you GOOD humans.

Sounds like Cot deaths calling the Cattle black to me.

black cow (ken c), Friday, 2 September 2005 14:45 (twenty years ago)

Some of you guys are headed in the right direction -- I like Horne's thinking -- but I don't know how you think you can make any legitimate progress on this issue talking about it on a human message board. We've tried working with the humans: it doesn't accomplish anything. It's time for direct action, but even you so-called "activists" would rather talk endlessly on message boards and beg and whine for the humans to solve your problems. When the only thing that's gonna solve them is a true egalitarian Bovine Anarchist Revolution.

It's coming. Get on board now: you're either with us or against us. If you want to make a real difference, we're making puppets on Sunday -- moo-mail me for details.

Anarcheifer (nabisco), Friday, 2 September 2005 14:50 (twenty years ago)

http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/4109/446/400/MC213.jpg

Fushigina Blobby: Blobania no Kiki (ex machina), Friday, 2 September 2005 14:57 (twenty years ago)

i don't like this sudden insurgence of cows on this thread.. isn't it time we make this board human-users-only?

daft monk (ken c), Friday, 2 September 2005 15:00 (twenty years ago)

Yeah, keep talking like you cattle aren't complicit in this disease. The same way you pretend you weren't complicit in the slaughter of MILLIONS of American Bison to make room for your human-collaborator "ranches." The history of the cattle is and always has been a history of death and slaughter. Get used to it.

Bison Littlefield (nabisco), Friday, 2 September 2005 15:02 (twenty years ago)

IF IT'S NOT NEWS, IT'S NOT FARK

Drew Curtis, Friday, 2 September 2005 15:04 (twenty years ago)

I would be very interested to see the keyboards you cows are using.

Draw Tipsy, ya hack. (dave225.3), Friday, 2 September 2005 15:23 (twenty years ago)

Certainly not keyboards you GLUTTONOUS ONE-STOMACHS bothered making for us.

Benny Bull-Calf (nabisco), Friday, 2 September 2005 15:25 (twenty years ago)

That "anarcheifer" sounds as mad as veal.

Cow (nabisco), Friday, 2 September 2005 15:27 (twenty years ago)

cows don't use keyboard.. they just use the MOO-ouse!

ken c (ken c), Friday, 2 September 2005 15:29 (twenty years ago)

You know, Cow, I'm getting really sick of hearing our own kind use that horrible, cynical phrase. I don't think the torture and oppression of our own young is anything to make light about. I don't care if it's an "idiom" or "just a saying" or whatever: it's wrong, and I think you should apologize.

Michael Horne (nabisco), Friday, 2 September 2005 15:29 (twenty years ago)

A cow? Apologize? That's rich.

Bison Littlefield (nabisco), Friday, 2 September 2005 15:30 (twenty years ago)

MY COUSIN WAS A VEAL CALF

anarcheifer (nabisco), Friday, 2 September 2005 15:31 (twenty years ago)

YO I GOTZ MAD COW BOYEEE

MC RANKIN' C, Friday, 2 September 2005 15:32 (twenty years ago)


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