Risk Analysis of Prion Diseases in Animals.Risk Analysis of Prion Diseases in Animals David Adams and Corrinne Ida Lasmezas, editors OIE Scientific and Technical Review 22 (2003) ISBN 92-9044-573-4 Pages: 346, Price: 45 Euros Although scrapie scrapie: see prion. , a prion disease of sheep, has been recognized since the 18th century, it was the dramatic emergence of bovine spongiform encephalopathy bovine spongiform encephalopathy: see prion. (BSE) in British cattle in the late 1980s that brought the dangers of prion diseases into prominence. The subsequent spread of this disease into humans as new variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) remains one of the unsolved emerging infectious disease An emerging infectious disease (EID) is an infectious disease whose incidence has increased in the past 20 years and threatens to increase in the near future. EIDs include diseases caused by a newly identified microorganism or newly identified strain of a known microorganism (e.g. mysteries of the 20th century. This issue (OIE Scientific and Technical Review 22 [2003]) of the Scientific and Technical Review of the Office International des Epizooties comes 11 years after a previous issue about BSE. Much has happened since then; this multi-author volume provides an excellent account of what is known about prion diseases in animals, including BSE, which has now spread from the United Kingdom to 14 other countries, and remains an important risk to human health. As a consequence of BSE emergence, research has been expanded considerably into transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSE). This research has resulted in improved diagnostic tests, which have contributed to risk management, even though our understanding of the underlying molecular pathogenesis of TSE remains limited. The 17 chapters in this book are written by experts from many countries and illustrate the various approaches to risk management in specific regions of the world. In addition to BSE, the book contains chapters about TSE of North America such as scrapie, transmissible mink encephalopathy Transmissible mink encephalopathy is a medical condition believed to be caused by proteins called prions. Transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME) is rare sporadic disease that affects the central nervous system of ranch-raised mink. , and chronic wasting disease Noun 1. chronic wasting disease - a wildlife disease (akin to bovine spongiform encephalitis) that affects deer and elk animal disease - a disease that typically does not affect human beings of deer and elk; the last disease has recently spread from its endemic Colorado-Wyoming area to six other states in the United States, as well as Alberta and Saskatchewan in Canada. With the recognition that BSE had spread in the United Kingdom and many other countries through feeding contaminated mammalian meat-and-bone meal to ruminants, a ban on this practice was instigated in the European Union in 1994. This ban has since been adopted by many other regions of the world. In 2000, the European Union strengthened the ban to prohibit feeding processed animal proteins to farmed animals kept, fattened, or bred to produce food. This measure has undoubtedly helped to prevent or reduce numbers of cases of BSE in ruminants but incidentally has led to a new science-based industry for feed analysis. This industry uses sophisticated molecular techniques such as near infrared spectroscopy This article is about spectroscopy. For the nonprofit nuclear energy watchdog, see Nuclear Information and Resource Service. Near infrared spectroscopy and microscopy, polymerase chain reaction polymerase chain reaction (pŏl`ĭmərās') (PCR), laboratory process in which a particular DNA segment from a mixture of DNA chains is rapidly replicated, producing a large, readily analyzed sample of a piece of DNA; the process is , and immunoassays to check feed for animal by-products, and to prevent intraspecies in·tra·spe·cif·ic also in·tra·spe·cies adj. Arising or occurring within a species: intraspecific competition. Adj. 1. recycling (cannibalism), which undoubtedly caused the BSE epidemic that resulted in the death of 186,000 cattle from 1985 to 2002. I recommend this book as an excellent source of information on all aspects of prion diseases in animals. Brian W.J. Mahy, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center. , Atlanta, GA, USA Address for correspondence: Brian W.J. Mahy, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Mailstop C12, 1600 Clifton Road, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA; fax: 404-639-4197; email: bxm1@cdc.gov |
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