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    Home > Active Ingredient News > Feed Industry News > British experts say the third way to find the spread of BSE (5.16)

    British experts say the third way to find the spread of BSE (5.16)

    • Last Update: 2003-03-12
    • Source: Internet
    • Author: User
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    OA show ('918 '); research by two British experts shows that, in addition to the two transmission routes of pregnant cow infectious calf and feed processed from the carcasses of infected animals, the faeces of sick cattle are likely to be the third way to transmit BSE According to French media reports, British experts Alan Dickinson and Stephen Diller recently briefed their colleagues around the world on the results of the study They said many mice were infected with mad cow disease by injecting them directly with the faeces of diseased cattle This shows that the feces excreted by diseased cattle can also be the vector of BSE They stressed that fecal worms can move the feces of sick cattle everywhere The saw protein in the faeces of diseased cattle can survive for several years in the soil If a healthy herd happens to eat grass in a pasture contaminated with faeces, it may be infected with BSE Previously, experts generally believed that the transmission way of mad cow disease is that pregnant cows can be transmitted to cattle and feed made from animal bone meal Therefore, European countries have taken strict measures to prohibit feeding ruminant livestock with animal bone meal; once BSE is found, all sick cattle and their cattle must be slaughtered and burned Nevertheless, the number of BSE in continental Europe is on the rise In France, for example, since the first case of BSE was found in 1991, 97 cases have been found so far, 17 of which were found in less than five months this year Jean grawani, Minister of agriculture and Fisheries of France, said last month that France had banned the feeding of ruminant livestock with animal bone meal since July 1990, and further banned the feeding of pigs and poultry with animal bone meal in August 1996, in order to avoid ruminant livestock infected with mad cow disease due to eating feed contaminated by pig and poultry feed The incubation period of BSE is generally 5 years If there are only two known routes of transmission, the number of BSE in France, which has taken strict measures, should be less and less now, and will disappear completely by the end of 2001 However, the number of cases of BSE in France is increasing This suggests that there should be other routes of transmission of BSE besides the known ones French experts believe that the British experts' research has explained the reason for the increase of BSE cases year by year, but this needs to be verified by other experiments If this result can be further proved, it shows that the control measures of BSE should be further improved, and the time of eradicating BSE should be postponed for at least 5 years TPD (author:)
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