Health > Did human remains from India cause BSE? - study Mad cow disease may have originated from
animal feed contaminated with human remains washed ashore after
being floated downriver in Indian funerals, British scientists
said on Friday.
The cause of mad cow disease, or bovine spongiform
encephalopathy (BSE), which infected an estimated 2 million
cattle during an epidemic in Britain, is unknown.
It is thought to have resulted from cattle being fed
material containing remains of sheep infected with scrapie.
But Professor Alan Colchester of the University of Kent in
England says it may have been caused by the tonnes of animal
bones and other tissue imported from India for animal feed
which also may have contained the remains of humans infected
with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD).
Scrapie, BSE and CJD are all illnesses caused by brain
proteins that transform themselves into infectious agents.
"Existing theories of the original causes of BSE, the
bovine disease, we don't find convincing," Colchester said in
an interview.
"We have identified the fact that a large amount of
imported animal feeding material was brought into Britain
during the period when BSE must first have occurred and the
largest source coming to the UK was from the Indian
subcontinent," he added.
MIX OF REMAINS
In a report in the Lancet medical journal, Colchester and
his daughter Nancy, of the University of Edinburgh, explained
that many human and animal corpses were disposed of in rivers
in India in accordance with Hindu custom.
The remains washed ashore in poor areas where bone
collectors work.
"We are aware of a considerable risk of the incorporation
of human remains with the animal remains that are collected.
They are processed locally and some have been exported. In 10
years, more than a third of a million tonnes of material from
these areas was imported into the UK," Colchester said.
The scientists believe the contaminated feed led to BSE.
Scientists believe humans acquired variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease (vCJD) from eating meat from infected cattle.
Since vCJD was first detected in the mid-1990s, more than
150 people have died of the illness.
The scientists said the risk of a load of animal
by-products being infected with human material would be very
small. But importing animal material went on for decades so the
cumulative risk could become significant over time.
Colchester and his daughter say they doubt BSE resulted
from scrapie because material infected with the disease has
been fed to cattle for many decades without any sign of BSE
arising.
In a commentary in the journal, Susaria Shankar of the
National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences in
Bangalore, India, said one case of scrapie, which was probably
imported, has been reported from the Himalayan foothills.
"Scientists must proceed cautiously when hypothesizing
about a disease that has such wide geographic, cultural and
religious implications," Shankar said.
"We agree that the idea proposed by the Colchesters needs
to be probed further. Facts to support or refute their
hypothesis now need to be gathered with urgency and great
care."
2005-09-03
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