|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Medicine
& Health : BSE/CJD
Britain: Report highlights BSE danger from infected sheep
By Barry Mason
21 January 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
The risk to humans developing variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease
(vCJD) could be far greater if the brain-wasting disease Bovine
Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE) has entered the sheep population.
This was the conclusion of a study published in the British science
magazine Nature on January 10.
The study was carried out by researchers working in the infectious
diseases department of Imperial College London led by Professor
Neil Ferguson.
BSE in cattle, also known as mad cow disease, is
believed to have been spread by the practice of feeding cows the
rendered remains of slaughtered cattle and other livestock. Until
legislation banned the practice, sheep were also fed the same
material.
Since it began in the late 1980s, the BSE epidemic has infected
nearly 180,000 cattle. At its height in 1992 over 36,000 cattle
had the disease. Numbers have now declined with around 700 cases
last year.
Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Diseasethe human form of BSEis
transmitted by eating infected meat or other animal products.
Since 1995, 104 mainly young people have died of the disease,
with nine more people currently diagnosed as suffering from this
terminal and incurable condition. The eventual number of people
who could be affected is still an unknown, because of the extremely
long incubation period for the disease. There also remains the
possibility of a second wave of infection via human-to-human transmission
as a result of surgical procedures. Since the infective agent,
the BSE prion, is extremely difficult to destroy, the usual sterilisation
methods used on surgical instruments do not eradicate it.
The researchers at Imperial College considered three possible
scenarios if BSE has passed into the national sheep flock. The
worst possible case considered the effect of BSE spreading both
within and between sheep flocks. The studys median scenario
projected the spread only within a flock, while the best-case
scenario investigated what would happen if it spread neither between
nor within flocks. Sophisticated mathematical models were devised
to predict the possible effects on the human population.
In the worst case, the study predicts that 150,000 people could
die as a result of eating infected sheep meat. This figure is
three times higher than the worse case scenario of human deaths
from vCJD contracted from eating contaminated beef.
It has not yet been shown whether sheep have in fact contracted
the disease. The report is based on the assumption that BSE has
passed from cattle to sheep and has been spreading from sheep
to sheep. Many scientists think that such a cross over from cattle,
and its subsequent spread within sheep, is a possibility. Professor
Neil Ferguson said, In some ways Id be surprised if
BSE wasnt found in sheep.
One difficulty detecting BSE in sheep is that sheep are also
subject to a brain-wasting disease known as scrapie. This has
been in the sheep population for 200 years and is considered harmless
to humans. Currently there is no test to distinguish between BSE
and scrapie in sheep.
Studies have shown that BSE in sheep behaves differently to
the disease in cattle. It infects a wider range of sheep tissues
at an earlier age. There are fears that BSE in sheep could mimic
scrapie, which passes easily by horizontal infection from sheep
to sheep.
Under current legislation, the ban on sheep offal is not as
extensive as that on cattle offal, some of the most infective
material. With sheep under 12 months old, only the spleen has
to be removed before the carcass can enter the human food chain.
For sheep older than one year, the skull, brain, eyes, tonsils
and spinal chord are banned, but not the lymph nodes or intestines
(as in cattle).
Professor Ferguson said, The current risk from sheep
could be greater than that from cattle, due to the more intensive
controls in place to protect human health from exposure to infected
cattle, as compared with sheep.
In a newspaper article in August last year, former government
advisor Dr Richard Kimberlin warned of the potential danger from
BSE-infected sheep: We now know that several tissues from
BSE-infected sheep, including lymph nodes, pose a greater risk
than the same tissues from infected cattle.
The Imperial College team says that banning all internal sheep
organs from the human food chain would reduce the health risk
by 90 percent.
Frances Hall, secretary of the Human BSE Foundation, said,
If it is in sheep, people could have been eating contaminated
meat for years. Frances, whose son Peter died from vCJD
in 1996, added, Its very sad to think more families
might be having to go through the same nightmare weve gone
through needlessly.
The Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
(Defra) has begun a programme to screen sheep. Professor Tim Lang
of Thames Valley University, who had written widely on food safety,
is concerned about the suitability of Defra to conduct such a
study. One of the many things this sorry saga has taught
us is that we couldnt trust public health controls to be
run by a ministry in charge of production.
A previous government study set up to estimate BSE infection
in sheep brains had to be abandoned last year. It was discovered
that poor laboratory techniques meant the samples being studied
were possibly either cow brains or sheep brains that had been
contaminated with cow brains.
Following the BSE epidemic in Britain, the Labour government
set up the Food Standards Agency (FSA). In October last year it
issued an update report on the risk of BSE in sheep that stated,
If BSE were found to be present in sheep, the current SRM
[Specified Risk Material, i.e. offal, spinal cord, etc.] controls
would not be adequate to eliminate the risk of infected sheep
meat form entering the food chain. It has been shown that it is
impossible to remove all infectivity from a sheep.
The FSA, which had commissioned the Imperial College report,
issued an equivocal and defensive statement in response. It read,
We do not know whether BSE entered the sheep flock in the
past and, if it did, whether it is in sheep today. Given this
uncertainty, the agency has been proactive in examining whether
further precautionary measures may be appropriate in addition
to those currently in place.
Although now at a much reduced level, the risk of BSE from
cattle has not yet been eliminated. The FSA announced last week
that the meat of a calf born to a BSE infected cow had entered
the human food chain. The incident is reported to have occurred
in Wales last November.
According to reports, a farmer had sold the calf to an abattoir.
Normally, offspring of BSE-infected cattle would be culled and
the carcass destroyed. Among the measures to combat BSE, a cattle
passport system has been introduced, and this should
have prevented the calf from being sent to the abattoir and its
meat sold.
The FSA said a backlog on culling infected animals had built
up because of the demands placed on the veterinary service by
the foot and mouth epidemic, which was only declared officially
over on January 15. Pressure on vets and other officials had led
to a build up of suspect animals.
Defra published a report on November 2001 noting the continuing
danger from BSE. Despite the measures taken to control the
current outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease in the UK, the controls
for restricting, slaughtering and testing BSE suspects continue
albeit at a lower level due to the need to redeploy resources,
the report said.
The FSA has called on the government to tighten up procedures
to ensure that the offspring of BSE-infected cattle do not enter
the food chain. Debby Reynolds veterinary director of the FSA
said, This is a regrettable incident adding We
want to see the cull of offspring of BSE animals backlog cleared
as a priority.
See Also:
Britain: Labour government
accused of cover-up over BSE experiments
[26 October 2001]
World Health Organisation
says BSE is a major threat
[6 July 2001]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |