Selon le journal Medical Lancet une nouvelle theorie vient d'etre avancee qui dit que la maladie de la vache folle pourrait etre causee par la nourriture donnee a la vache et qui consiste selon cette theorie de restes humains notament les os desseches des morts humains et vendus pas les pauvres de ces pays la pour des pays comme l'angleterre....
L'origine de cette maladie est unconnu mais elle appartient a la classe des encephalopathies spongiformes transmissibles.
Une poignee des E.S.T se trouve chez les humains comme la maladie d'Alper etc..et ces formes d'encephalopathies ne sont ni curables ni en mesure d'etre diagnostiquees a temps
C'est ecoeurant... je crois que je n'en consommerai plus de cette denree
c'est dire il n'ya plus de limites pour ces gens cupides qui veulent gagner de l'argent a tout prix....Je sens que nous allons bientot devenir des canibales consommant de la viande a base de restes humains
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Human remains theory for mad cow disease
September 2, 2005 - 11:53AM
A new theory proposes that mad cow disease may have come from feeding British cattle with meal contaminated with human remains infected with a permutation of the disease.
The hypothesis, outlined this week in The Lancet medical journal, suggests that the infected cattle feed came from the Indian subcontinent, where bodies sometimes are ceremonially thrown into the Ganges river.
Indian experts not connected with the research exposed weaknesses in the theory, but agreed it should be investigated.
The cause of the original case or cases of mad cow disease, or bovine spongiform encephalopathy, is unknown.
It belongs to a class of illnesses called transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, or TSEs. They exist in several species. Scrapie is a TSE that affects sheep and goats, while chronic wasting disease is one that afflicts elk and deer.
A handful of TSEs are found in humans, including Kuru, Alper's disease and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, or CJD.
All the TSEs are fatal, untreatable and undiagnosable until after death. They are called spongiform encephalopathies because the diseases involve spongy degeneration of the brain.
L'origine de cette maladie est unconnu mais elle appartient a la classe des encephalopathies spongiformes transmissibles.
Une poignee des E.S.T se trouve chez les humains comme la maladie d'Alper etc..et ces formes d'encephalopathies ne sont ni curables ni en mesure d'etre diagnostiquees a temps
C'est ecoeurant... je crois que je n'en consommerai plus de cette denree
c'est dire il n'ya plus de limites pour ces gens cupides qui veulent gagner de l'argent a tout prix....Je sens que nous allons bientot devenir des canibales consommant de la viande a base de restes humains
-------------------
Human remains theory for mad cow disease
September 2, 2005 - 11:53AM
A new theory proposes that mad cow disease may have come from feeding British cattle with meal contaminated with human remains infected with a permutation of the disease.
The hypothesis, outlined this week in The Lancet medical journal, suggests that the infected cattle feed came from the Indian subcontinent, where bodies sometimes are ceremonially thrown into the Ganges river.
Indian experts not connected with the research exposed weaknesses in the theory, but agreed it should be investigated.
The cause of the original case or cases of mad cow disease, or bovine spongiform encephalopathy, is unknown.
It belongs to a class of illnesses called transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, or TSEs. They exist in several species. Scrapie is a TSE that affects sheep and goats, while chronic wasting disease is one that afflicts elk and deer.
A handful of TSEs are found in humans, including Kuru, Alper's disease and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, or CJD.
All the TSEs are fatal, untreatable and undiagnosable until after death. They are called spongiform encephalopathies because the diseases involve spongy degeneration of the brain.
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