Could Mad Cow Disease Already be Killing Thousands of Americans
Every Year?
January 7, 2004 by Michael Greger, M.D. for the
Organic Consumers Association
October 2001, 34-year-old Washington State native Peter Putnam
started losing his mind. One month he was delivering a keynote
business address, the next he couldn't form a complete sentence.
Once athletic, soon he couldn't walk. Then he couldn't eat.
After a brain biopsy showed it was Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease,
his doctor could no longer offer any hope. "Just take
him home and love him," the doctor counseled his family.[1,2,3]
Peter's tragic death, October 2002, may have been caused by
Mad Cow disease.
Seven years earlier and 5000 miles away, Stephen Churchill
was the first in England to die. His first symptoms of depression
and dizziness gave way to a living nightmare of terrifying
hallucinations; he was dead in 12 months at age 19.[4] Next
was Peter Hall, 20, who showed the first signs of depression
around Christmas, 1994. By the next Christmas, he couldn't
walk, talk, or do anything for himself.[5] Then it was Anna's
turn, then Michelle's. Michelle Bowen, age 29, died in a coma
three weeks after giving birth to her son via emergency cesarean
section. Then it was Alison's turn. These were the first five
named victims of Britain's Mad Cow epidemic. They died from
what the British Secretary of Health called the worst form
of death imaginable, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, a relentlessly
progressive and invariably fatal human dementia.[6] The announcement
of their deaths, released on March 20, 1996 (ironically, Meatout
Day[7]), reversed the British government's
decade-old stance that British beef was safe to eat.[8]
It is now considered an "incontestable fact" that
these human deaths in
Britain were caused by Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE),
or Mad Cow disease.[9] Bovine means "cow or cattle,"
spongiform means "sponge-like," and encephalopathy
means "brain disease." Mad Cow disease is caused
by unconventional pathogens called prions--literally infectious
proteins--which, because of their unique structure, are practically
invulnerable, surviving even incineration[10] at temperatures
hot enough to melt lead.[11] The leading theory as to how
cows got Mad Cow disease in the
first place is by eating diseased sheep infected with a sheep
spongiform encephalopathy called scrapie.[12]
In humans, prions can cause Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD),
a human spongiform encephalopathy whose clinical picture can
involve weekly deterioration into blindness and epilepsy as
one's brain becomes riddled with tiny holes.
We've known about Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease for decades,
since well before the first mad cow was discovered in 1985.
Some cases of CJD seemed to run in families; other cases seemed
to just arise spontaneously in about one in a million people
every year, and were hence dubbed "sporadic." The
new form of CJD caused by eating beef from cows infected with
Mad Cow disease, though,
seemed to differ from the classic sporadic CJD.
The CJD caused by infected meat has tended to strike younger
people, has produced more psychotic symptoms, and has often
dragged on for a year or more. The most defining characteristic,
though, was found when their brains were sampled. The brain
pathology was vividly reminiscent of Kuru, a disease once
found in a New Guinea tribe of cannibals who ate the brains
of their dead.[13] Scientists called this new form of the
disease "variant" CJD.
Other than Charlene, a 24 year old woman now so tragically
dying in Florida, who was probably infected in Britain, there
have been no reported cases of variant CJD in the U.S.[14]
Hundreds of confirmed cases of the sporadic form of Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease, however, arise in the United States every year,[15]
but the beef industry is quick to point out these are cases
of sporadic CJD, not the new variant known to be caused by
Mad Cow disease. [16] Of course, no one knows what causes
sporadic CJD. New research, discussed
below, suggests that not hundreds but thousands of Americans
die of sporadic CJD every year, and that some of these CJD
deaths may be caused by eating infected meat after all.
Although the fact that Mad Cow disease causes variant CJD
had already been strongly established, researchers at the
University College of London nevertheless created transgenic
mice complete with "humanized" brains genetically
engineered with human genes to try to prove the link once
and for all. When the researchers injected one strain of the
"humanized" mice with infected cow brains, they
came down with the same brain damage seen in human variant
CJD, as expected. But when they tried this in a different
strain of transgenic "humanized" mice, those mice
got sick too, but most got sick from what looked exactly like
sporadic CJD! The Mad Cow prions caused a disease that had
a molecular signature indistinguishable from sporadic CJD.
To the extent that animal experiments can simulate human results,
their shocking conclusion was that eating infected meat might
be responsible for some cases of sporadic CJD in addition
to the expected variant CJD. The researchers concluded that
"it is therefore possible that some patients with [what
looks like]... sporadic CJD may have a disease arising from
BSE exposure."[17] Laura Manuelidis, section chief of
surgery in the neuropathology department at Yale University
comments, "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]..." [18]
This is not the first time meat was linked to sporadic CJD.
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]
Pork is also a potential source of infection. Cattle remains
are still
boiled down and legally fed to pigs (as well as chickens)
in this country. The FDA allows this exemption because no
"naturally occurring" porcine (pig) spongiform encephalopathy
has ever been found. But American farmers typically kill pigs
at just five months of age, long before the disease is expected
to show symptoms. And, because pigs are packed so tightly
together, it would be difficult to spot neurological conditions
like spongiformencephalopathies, whose most obvious symptoms
are movement and gait disturbances. We do know, however, that
pigs are susceptible to the disease--laboratory experiments
show that pigs can indeed be infected by Mad Cow brains[25]--and
hundreds of thousands of downer pigs, too sick or
crippled by injury to even walk, arrive at U.S. slaughterhouses
every
year.[26]
A number of epidemiological studies have suggested a link
between pork consumption and sporadic CJD. Analyzing peoples'
diet histories, the development of CJD was associated with
eating roast pork, ham, hot dogs, pork chops, smoked pork,
and scrapple (a kind of pork pudding made from various hog
carcass scraps). The researchers concluded, "The present
study indicated that consumption of pork as well as its processed
products (e.g., ham, scrapple) may be considered as risk factors
in the development of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease." Compared
to people that didn't eat ham, for example, those who included
ham in their diet seemed ten times more likely to develop
CJD.[27] In fact, the USDA may have actually recorded an outbreak
of "mad pig" disease in New York 25 years ago, but
still refuses to reopen the investigation despite petitions
from the Consumer's Union (the publishers of Consumer Reports
magazine).[28]
Sporadic CJD has also been associated with weekly beef consumption,[29]
as well as the consumption of roast lamb,[30] veal, venison,
brains in general,[31] and, in North America, seafood.[32,33]
The development of CJD has also, surprisingly, been significantly
linked to exposure to animal products in fertilizer,[34] sport
fishing and deer hunting in the U.S.,[35] and frequent exposure
to leather products.[36]
We do not know at this time whether chicken meat poses a
risk. There was a preliminary report of ostriches allegedly
fed risky feed in German zoos who seemed to come down with
a spongiform encephalopathy.[37] Even if chickens and turkeys
themselves are not susceptible, though, they may become so-called
"silent carriers" of Mad Cow prions and pass them
on to human consumers.[38] Dateline NBC quoted D. Carleton
Gajdusek, the first to be awarded a Nobel Prize in Medicine
for his work on prion diseases,[39] as saying, "it's
got to be in the pigs as well as the cattle. It's got to be
passing through the chickens."[40] Dr. Paul Brown, medical
director for the US Public Health Service, believes that pigs
and poultry could indeed be
harboring Mad Cow disease and passing it on to humans, adding
that pigs are especially sensitive to the disease. "It's
speculation," he says, "but I am perfectly serious."[41]
The recent exclusion of most cow brains, eyes, spinal cords,
and intestines from the human food supply may make beef safer,
but where are those tissues going? These potentially infectious
tissues continue to go into animal feed for chickens, other
poultry, pigs, and pets (as well as being rendered into products
like tallow for use in cosmetics, the safety of which is currently
under review[42]). Until the federal government stops the
feeding of slaughterhouse waste, manure, and blood to all
farm animals, the safety of meat in America cannot be guaranteed.
The hundreds of American families stricken by sporadic CJD
every year have been told that it just occurs by random chance.
Professor Collinge, the head of the University College of
London lab, noted "When you counsel those who have the
classical sporadic disease, you tell them that it arises spontaneously
out of the blue. I guess we can no longer say that."
"We are not saying that all or even most cases of sporadic
CJD are as a result of BSE exposure," Professor Collinge
continued, "but some more recent cases may be--the incidence
of sporadic CJD has shown an upward trend in the UK over the
last decade... serious consideration should be given to a
proportion of this rise being BSE-related. Switzerland, which
has had a substantial BSE epidemic, has noted a sharp recent
increase in sporadic CJD."[43] In the Nineties, Switzerland
had the highest rate of Mad Cow disease in continental Europe,
and their rate of sporadic CJD doubled.[44]
We don't know exactly what's happening to the rate of CJD
in this country, in part because CJD is not an officially
notifiable illness.[45] Currently only a few states have such
a requirement. Because the Centers for Disease Control (CDC)
does not actively monitor the disease on a national level,[46]
a rise similar to the one in Europe could be missed.[47] In
spite of this, a number of U.S. CJD clusters have already
been found. In the largest known U.S. outbreak of sporadic
cases to date,[48] five times the expected rate was found
to be associated with cheese consumption in Pennsylvania's
Lehigh
Valley.[49] A striking increase in CJD over expected levels
was also
reported in Florida[50] and New York (Nassau County)[51] with
anecdotal reports of clusters of deaths in Oregon[52] and
New Jersey.[53]
Perhaps particularly worrisome is the seeming increase in
CJD deaths among young people in this country. In the 18 years
between 1979 and 1996, only a single case of sporadic CJD
was found in someone under 30. Whereas between 1997 and 2001,
five people under 30 died of sporadic CJD. So five young Americans
dying in five years, as opposed to one young case in the previous
18 years. The true prevalence of CJD among any age group in
this country
remains a mystery, though, in part because it is so commonly
misdiagnosed.[54]
The most frequent misdiagnosis of CJD among the elderly is
Alzheimer's disease.[55] Neither CJD nor Alzheimer's can be
conclusively diagnosed without a brain biopsy,[56] and the
symptoms and pathology of both diseases overlap. There can
be spongy changes in Alzheimer's, for example, and senile
Alzheimer's plaques in CJD.[57] Stanley Prusiner, the scientist
who won the Nobel Prize for his discovery of prions, speculates
that Alzheimer's may even turn out to be a prion disease as
well.[58] In younger victims, CJD is
more often misdiagnosed as multiple sclerosis or as a severe
viral
infection.[59]
Over the last 20 years the rates of Alzheimer's disease in
the United States have skyrocketed.[60] According to the CDC,
Alzheimer's Disease is now the eighth leading cause of death
in the United States,[61] afflicting an estimated 4 million
Americans.[62] Twenty percent or more of people clinically
diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease, though, are found at autopsy
not to have had Alzheimer's at all.[63] A number of autopsy
studies have shown that a few percent of Alzheimer's deaths
may in fact be CJD. Given the new research showing that infected
beef may be responsible for some sporadic
CJD, thousands of Americans may already be dying because of
Mad Cow disease
every year.[64]
Nobel Laureate Gajdusek, for example, estimates that 1% of
people showing up in Alzheimer clinics actually have CJD.[65]
At Yale, out of a series of 46 patients clinically diagnosed
with Alzheimer's, six were proven to have CJD at autopsy.[66]
In another study of brain biopsies, out of a dozen patients
diagnosed with Alzheimer's according to established criteria,
three of them were actually dying from CJD.[67] An informal
survey of neuropathologists
registered a suspicion that CJD accounts for 2-12% of all
dementias in general.[68] Two autopsy studies showed a CJD
rate among dementia deaths of about 3%.[69,70] A third study,
at the University of Pennsylvania, showed that 5% of patients
diagnosed with dementia had CJD.[71] Although only a few hundred
cases of sporadic CJD are officially reported in the U.S.
annually,[72] hundreds of thousands of Americans die with
dementia every year.[73] Thousands of these deaths may actually
be from CJD caused by eating infected meat.
The incubation period for human spongiform encephalopathies
such as CJD can be decades.[74] This means it can be years
between eating infected meat and getting diagnosed with the
death sentence of CJD. Although only about 150 people have
so far been diagnosed with variant CJD worldwide, it will
be many years before the final death toll is known. In the
United States, an unknown number of animals are infected with
Mad Cow disease, causing an unknown number of human deaths
from CJD. The U.S. should immediately begin testing all cows
destined for human consumption, as is done in Japan, should
stop feeding slaughterhouse waste to all farm animals (see
http://organicconsumers.org/madcow/GregerBSE.cfm),
and should immediately enact an active national surveillance
program for CJD.[75]
Five years ago this week, the Center for Food Safety, the
Humane Farming Association, the Center for Media & Democracy,
and ten families of CJD victims petitioned the FDA and the
CDC to immediately enact a national CJD monitoring system,
including the mandatory reporting of CJD in all 50 states.[76]
The petition was denied.[77] The CDC argued that their passive
surveillance system tracking death certificate diagnoses was
adequate. Their analysis of death certificates in three states
and two cities, for example,
showed an overall stable and typical one in a million CJD
incidence rate from 1979 to 1993.[78] But CJD is so often
misdiagnosed, and autopsies are so infrequently done, that
this system may not provide an accurate assessment.[79]
In 1997, the CDC set up the National Prion Disease Pathology
Surveillance Center at Case Western Reserve University to
analyze brain tissue from CJD victims in the U.S. in hopes
of tracking any new developments. In Europe, surveillance
centers have been seeing most, if not all, cases of CJD. The
U.S. center sees less than half. "I'm very unhappy with
the numbers," laments Pierluigi Gambetti , the director
of the Center. "The British and Germans politely smile
when they see we examine 30% or 40% of the cases," he
says. "They know unless you examine 80% or more, you
are not in touch."[80] "The chance of losing an
important case is high."[81]
One problem is that many doctors don't even know the Center
exists. And neither the CDC nor the Center are evidently authorized
to reach out to them directly to bolster surveillance efforts,
because it's currently up to each state individually to determine
how--or even whether--they will track the disease. In Europe,
in contrast, the national centers work directly with each
affected family and their physicians.[82] In the U.S., most
CJD cases--even the confirmed ones--seem to just fall through
the cracks. In fact, based on the autopsy studies at Yale
and elsewhere, it seems most CJD
cases in the U.S. aren't even picked up in the first place.
Autopsy rates have dropped in the U.S. from 50% in the Sixties
to less than 10% at present.[83] Although one reason autopsies
are rarely performed on atypical dementia cases is that medical
professionals are afraid of catching the disease,[84] the
primary reason for the decline in autopsy rates in general
appears to be financial. There is currently no direct reimbursement
to doctors or hospitals for doing autopsies, which often forces
the family
to absorb the cost of transporting the body to an autopsy
center and having the brain samples taken, a tab that can
run upwards of $1500.[85]
Another problem is that the National Prion Disease Pathology
Surveillance Center itself remains underfunded. Paul Brown,
medical director for the National Institutes of Health, has
described the Center's budget as "pitiful," complaining
that "there isn't any budget for CJD surveillance."[86]
To adequately survey America's 290 million residents, "you
need a lot of money." UK CJD expert Robert Will explains,
"There was a CJD meeting of families in America in which...
[the CDC] got attacked fairly vigorously because there wasn't
proper surveillance. You could only do proper surveillance
if you have adequate resources."[87] "I compare
this to the early days of AIDS," says protein chemist
Shu Chen, who directs the
Center's lab, "when no one wanted to deal with the crisis."[88]
Andrew Kimbrell, the director of the Center for Food Safety,
a D.C.-based public interest group, writes, "Given what
we know now, it is unconscionable that the CDC is not strictly
monitoring these diseases."[89] Given the presence of
Mad Cow disease in the U.S., we need to immediately enact
uniform active CJD surveillance on a national level, provide
adequate funding not only for autopsies but also for the shipment
of bodies, and require mandatory reporting of the disease
in all 50 states. In Britain, even feline spongiform encephalopathy,
the cat version of Mad Cow disease, is an officially notifiable
illness. "No one has looked for CJD systematically in
the U.S.," notes NIH medical director Paul Brown. "Ever."[90]
The animal agriculture industries continue to risk public
safety, and the government seems to protect the industries'
narrow business interests more than it protects its own citizens.
Internal USDA documents retrieved through the Freedom of Information
Act show that our government did indeed consider a number
of precautionary measures as far back as 1991 to protect the
American public from Mad Cow disease. According to one such
document, however, the USDA explained that the "disadvantage"
of these measures was
that "the cost to the livestock and rendering industries
would be
substantial."[91]
Plant sources of protein for farm animals can cost up to
30% more than cattle remains.[92] The Cattlemen's Association
admitted a decade ago that animal agribusiness could indeed
find economically feasible alternatives to feeding slaughterhouse
waste to other animals, but that the they did not want to
set a precedent of being ruled by "activists."[93]
Is it a coincidence that USDA Secretary Veneman chose Dale
Moore, former chief lobbyist for the National Cattlemen's
Beef Association, as her chief of staff?[94] Or Alison Harrison,
former director of public relations for the Cattlemen's Association,
as her official spokeswoman?[95] Or that one of the new Mad
Cow committee appointees is William Hueston, who was paid
by the beef industry to testify against Oprah Winfrey in hopes
of convicting her of beef "disparagement"?[96] After
a similar conflict of interest unfolded in
Britain, their entire Ministry of Agriculture was dissolved
and an
independent Food Safety Agency was created, whose sole responsibility
is to protect the public's health. Until we learn from Britain's
lesson, and until the USDA stops treating this as a PR problem
to be managed instead of a serious global threat,[97] millions
of Americans will remain at risk.
For updates on this evolving crisis, visit the OCA Mad Cow
page or send a blank email to DrGregerMadCowUpdates-subscribe@lists.riseup.net
For background on this important issue, read the excellent
book Mad Cow U.S.A., the full text of which is available free
online at
http://www.prwatch.org,
or my report U.S. Violates WHO Guidelines for Mad Cow Disease".
Michael Greger, M.D., has been the Chief BSE Investigator
for Farm Sanctuary since 1993 and the Mad Cow Coordinator
for the Organic Consumers Association since 2001. Dr. Greger
has debated the National Cattlemen's Beef Association before
the FDA and was invited as an expert witness at the infamous
Oprah Winfrey "meat defamation" trial. He has contributed
to many books and
articles on the subject, continues to lecture extensively,
and currently
runs the Mad Cow disease website http://www.organicconsumers.org/madcow.htm.
Dr. Greger is a graduate of the Cornell University School
of Agriculture and the Tufts University School of Medicine.
He can be reached for media inquiries at (206) 312-8640 or
mhg1@cornell.edu.
Any part of this report may be reproduced subject to acknowledgment.
REFERENCES:
(Full text of specific articles available by emailing article-request@DrGreger.org)
1 Spokesman Review. 22 September 2003
http://www.organicconsumers.org/madcow/putnam92203.cfm
2 HealthDayNews. 26 September 2003
http://www.healthday.com/view.cfm?id=515265
3 Reuters. 27 December 2003
http://www.organicconsumers.org/madcow/cjd122703.cfm
4 Moyes, Jojo. "Depression Leads to Painful Death."
Independent 21 March 1996: 1.
5 "Victims' Families Cry Cover-Up by Protecting Beef
Industry, Government
Cost Lives, They Say." Miami Herald 26 March 1996: 7A.
6 PA News 30 November 1998.
7 http://meatout.org/
8 Brown, Paul. "Beef Crisis." Guardian 26 March
1996a: 7.
9 British Medical Journal 322(2001):841.
10 Journal of Infectious Diseases 161 (1990): 467-472.
11 Bentor, Yinon. Chemical Element.com - Lead. Jun. 3, 2003.
http://www.chemicalelements.com/elements/pb.html
12 British Medical Journal 322(2001):841.
13 Bulletin of the World Health Organization 70 (1992): 183-
190.
14 http://www.organicconsumers.org/madcow/florida1304.cfm
15 Journal of the American Medical Association, November 8,
2000; 284(18).
16 http://www.bseinfo.org/dsp/dsplocationContent.cfm?locationId=1267
17 "BSE prions propagate as either variant CJD-like or
sporadic CJD-like prion strains in transgenic mice expressing
human prion protein." EMBO
Journal, Vol. 21, No. 23, 6358-6368, 2002.
http://emboj.oupjournals.org/cgi/content/full/21/23/6358
18 United Press International. 29 December 2003.
http://organicconsumers.org/madcow/CJD122903.cfm
19 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 98(2001):4142.
20 "BSE may cause more CJD cases than thought New Scientist
28 November 2002.
21 Journal of Infectious Disease 142(1980):205-8.
22
http://www.aphis.usda.gov/vs/nahps/scrapie/yearly_report/yearly-report.html
23 March 17, 2000 Federal Register (Volume 65,:Page 14521).
http://www.mad-cow.org/00/apr00scrapie.html
24 "Sheep consumption: a possible source of spongiform
encephalopathy in humans." Neuroepidemiology. 4(1985):240-9.
25 The Veterinary Record 127(1990):338.
26 National Hog Farmer. 15 February 2002.
27 American Journal of Epidemiology Vol. 122, No. 3 (1985),
pgs. 443-451.
28 http://www.consumersunion.org/food/psecpi301.htm
29 Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease surveillance in the UK: sixth
annual report
1997. Edinburgh, Scotland: National CJD Surveillance Unit,
1998.
30 American Journal of Epidemiology Vol. 122, No. 3 (1985),
pgs. 443-451.
31 Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease surveillance in the UK: sixth
annual report
1997. Edinburgh, Scotland: National CJD Surveillance Unit,
1998.
32 Quarterly Journal of Medicine 93(2000):617.
33 American Journal of Epidemiology 98( 1973):381-394.
34 Lancet 1998; 351:1081-5.
35 American Journal of Epidemiology 122(1985)443-451.
36 Lancet 1998; 351:1081-5.
37 Schoon, H.A., Brunckhorst, D. and Pohlenz J. (1991) Spongiform
Encephalopathy in a Red-Necked Ostrich, Tierartzliche Praxis,
19, 263-5
38 Journal of Virology 75(21):10073-89 (2001).
39 http://www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1976/gajdusek-lecture.html
40 NBC Dateline 14 March 1997.
41 Pearce, Fred. "BSE May Lurk in Pigs and Chickens."
New Scientist 6 April
1996: 5.
42 http://organicconsumers.org/madcow/tallow123103.cfm
43 "BSE May Have Caused Some Cases Of CJD As Well As
vCJD." The Guardian. 29
November 2002.
44 Lancet 360(2002):139-141.
45 Neuroepidemiology 14 (1995): 174-181.
46 http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/diseases/cjd/bsecjdqa.htm
47 Altman, Lawrence K. "U.S. Officials Confident That
Mad Cow Disease of Britain Has Not Occurred Here." New
York Times 27 March 1996: 12A.
48 Flannery, Mary. "Twelve - Fifteen 'Mad Cow' Victims
a Year in Area." Philadelphia Daily News 26 March 1996:
03.
49 Neurology 43 (1993): A316.
50 Neurology 44 (1994): A260.
51 Annals of Clinical and Laboratory Science 31(2001):211.
52 Boule, Margie. "Despite Anecdotal Evidence, Docs Say
No Mad Cow Disease Here." Oregonian 16 April 1996: C01.
53 Burlington County Times 23 June 2003.
http://www.phillyburbs.com/pb-dyn/news/112-06232003-112425.html
54 Philip Yam. The Pathological Protein: Mad Cow, Chronic
Wasting, and Other Deadly Prion Diseases. New York: Springer-Verlag
Press, 2003.
55 British Journal of Psychiatry 158 (1991): 457-70.
56 Neurology 38 (1989): 76-79.
57 Neurology 39 (1989): 1103-1104.
58 New England Journal of Medicine 310 (1984): 661-663.
59 "Brain Disease May Be Commoner Than Thought -Expert."
Reuter Information
Service 15 May 1996.
60 http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/00001820.htm
61 http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/alzheimr.htm
62 http://www.nimh.nih.gov/publicat/numbers.cfm
63 Neurology 34 (1984): 939.
64 The Lancet 336 (1990):21.
65 Folstein, M. "The Cognitive Pattern of Familial Alzheimer's
Disease." Biological Aspects of Alzheimer's Disease.
Ed. R. Katzman. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 1983.
66 Alzheimer Disease and Associated Disorders 2 (1989): 100-109.
67 Teixeira, F., et al. "Clinico-Pathological Correlation
in Dementias." Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience
20 (1995): 276-282.
68 British Journal of Psychiatry 158 (1991): 457-70.
69 Mahendra, B. Dementia Lancaster: MTP Press Limited, 1987:
174.
70 Archives of Neurology 44 (1987): 24-29.
71 Neurology 38 (1989): 76-79.
72 http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/diseases/cjd/bsecjdqa.htm
73 Dementia and Normal Aging, Cambridge University Press,
1994.
74 Neurology 55 (2000):1075.
75 Lancet Infectious Disease. 1 August 2003.
76 http://www.mad-cow.org/jan99_petition.html#ddd
77 http://www.centerforfoodsafety.org/li/CDCrspn1.html
78 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 12 April 1996: 295-303.
79 Neurology 43 (1993): A316.
80 The Wall Street Journal. 30 November 2001.
81 Beacon Journal (Akron). 5 June 2001.
http://www.organicconsumers.org/madcow/CJD6501.cfm
82 New York Times 30 January 2001.
83
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/living/Healthology/HS_autopsydearth_03130.htm
l
84 Altman, Lawrence K. "Four States Watching for Brain
Disorder." New York Times 9 April 1996.
85 http://www.medicomm.net/Consumer%20Site/tp/tp_a15.htm
86 http://www.organicconsumers.org/madcow/fact43001.cfm
87 Case Western Reserve University Magazine - Summer 2001.
88 Case Western Reserve University Magazine - Summer 2001.
89 USA Today. 7 January 1999.
90 Philip Yam. The Pathological Protein: Mad Cow, Chronic
Wasting, and Other
Deadly Prion Diseases. New York: Springer-Verlag Press, 2003.
91 Rampton, S and J. Stauber. Mad Cow USA: Could the Nightmare
Happen Here? Common Courage Press; (September 1997):149-50.
Full text available free online at http://prwatch.org/books/madcow.html
92 Food Chemical News 25 March 1996: 30.
93 Food Chemical News 5 July 1993: 57-59.
94 http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/5884855.htm
95 http://organicconsumers.org/madcow/usda1204.cfm
96 http://www.prwatch.org/prwissues/1998Q1/oprah.html
97 "World Health Organization says BSE is a major threat"
http://www.organicconsumers.org/madcow/BSE7601.cfm
|