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FDA PROPOSES ANIMAL-FEED RULE TO HELP PREVENT MAD COW DISEASE.


Byline: Lawrence K. Altman The New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times

The Food and Drug Administration on Thursday proposed a ban on the use of any tissue from a wide variety of animals in feed to prevent the spread of mad cow disease mad cow disease: see prion.
mad cow disease
 or bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE)

Fatal neurodegenerative disease of cattle. Symptoms include behavioral changes (e.g.
 if it ever occurred in the United States.

No case of mad cow disease has been detected in the United States in 10 years of monitoring. But the agency's precautionary step is being proposed because of strong evidence that the disease can be spread through animal feed contaminated with rogue proteins known as prions.

Mad cow disease has created havoc with the economy in Britain, where it has affected more than 165,000 cattle since the neurologic ailment was first detected in England in 1986. The source of the bovine disease is thought to be animal feed from processed offal offal

1. nonmeat edible products from animal slaughter. Includes brains, thymus, pancreas, liver, heart, kidney, tripes, sausage casings, chitterlings, crackling rind.

2. by-product of milling, called also weatlings, middlings. A high-protein supplement for herbivores.
 and other parts of slaughtered sheep.

Panic followed the British government's announcement last year of a tentative link between mad cow disease and an untreatable Un`treat´a`ble

a. 1. Incapable of being treated; not practicable.
 and incurable human version of an ailment known as Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, which occurs in about one in 1 million people in the world.

British experts have reported 14 confirmed cases of a variant form of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, and French doctors have reported one case.

There has been no proof that mad cow disease can jump species, from cattle to humans, and there has been no evidence of an explosive outbreak of the new form of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans. Federal health officials have found no evidence of the variant form of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in the United States.

The proposal, to be published in The Federal Register today, will prohibit using protein from any ruminant ruminant, any of a group of hooved mammals that chew their cud, i.e., that regurgitate and chew again food that has already been swallowed. Ruminants have an even number of toes on each foot and a stomach with either three or four chambers.  animal in the manufacture of ruminant feeds. Ruminants are animals that chew their cuds; among them are cattle, sheep, goats, deer and elk. Mink are included in the ban because they can be affected by an ailment similar to mad cow disease.

The public will have 45 days to comment on the proposal, and then the agency expects to put the ban into effect this year, Dr. David Kessler, the commissioner of food and drugs, said in an interview.

Mad cow disease is also known as BSE See Bombay Stock Exchange.

BSE

See Boston Stock Exchange (BSE).
, for bovine spongiform encephalopathy bovine spongiform encephalopathy: see prion. . It is so named because it produces holes in various areas of the brain, giving it a pitted appearance like Swiss cheese. Similar spongiform spongiform /spon·gi·form/ (spun´ji-form) resembling a sponge.

spon·gi·form
adj.
Resembling a sponge, as in appearance or porosity.



spongiform

resembling a sponge.
 diseases affect a variety of animals.

The disease generally takes years to develop silently. But then it progresses from initial symptoms to almost certain death in a relatively short time.

Because such diseases have not been transmitted through reprocessed feed to poultry, swine and pets, such feed would be exempted from the proposed American ban, Kessler said.

Other exemptions include blood from cattle and ruminant-derived milk and gelatin gelatin or animal jelly, foodstuff obtained from connective tissue (found in hoofs, bones, tendons, ligaments, and cartilage) of vertebrate animals by the action of boiling water or dilute acid. , he said, because the agency has no information suggesting that milk proteins, gelatin or bovine blood proteins can potentially transmit mad-cow-like disease.
COPYRIGHT 1997 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Article Type:Statistical Data Included
Date:Jan 3, 1997
Words:484
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