The Citizen (KZN)

Human ‘mad cow’ detectable

- Miami

– Abnormal proteins involved in the brain-destroying Creutzfeld­t-Jakob disease (CJD), a human form of “mad cow” disease, are detectable in the skin, researcher­s said on Wednesday, raising new concerns about transmissi­on.

It is highly unlikely that the fast-moving and fatal disease could be spread by casual contact, since the prions in the human skin are at levels 1 000 to 100 000 times lower than in the brain, said the report in the journal Science Translatio­nal Medicine.

Rather, researcher­s said the discovery means CJD could be spread through common surgeries that do not involve the brain, said the report.

“It is well known that CJD is transmissi­ble via surgical or medical procedures involving prion-infected brain tissue,” said lead author Wenquan Zou, associate professor of pathology and neurology at Case Western Reserve School of Medicine.

“Our finding of infectious prions in skin is important since it not only raises concerns about the potential for disease transmissi­on via common surgeries not involving the brain, but also suggests that skin biopsies and autopsies may enhance pre-mortem and post-mortem CJD diagnosis.”

Only biopsies, spinal taps or autopsies can tell for sure if a patient is stricken with the rare, degenerati­ve brain disorder which affects just one in a million people per year worldwide.

Patients develop tiny spongelike holes in their brains, and experience sudden memory and vision problems, behavioura­l changes and poor coordinati­on.

There is no cure for CJD and most people who are diagnosed rapidly deteriorat­e, and die within a year.

The World Health Organisati­on said research has shown that there have been 224 cases of Creutzfeld­t-Jakob disease from October 1996 to March 2011 – mainly in Britain. – AFP

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