bovine spongiform encephalopathy

bovine spongiform encephalopathyCow suffering from bovine spongiform encephalopathy.

bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), a fatal neurodegenerative disease of cattle.

Bovine spongiform encephalopathy is caused by an infectious agent that has a long incubation period, between two and five years. Signs of the disease include behavioral changes, such as agitation and nervousness, and a progressive loss of muscular coordination and locomotive function. In advanced stages the animal frequently loses weight, shows fine muscular contractions over its neck and body, walks in an abnormal and exaggerated manner, and may isolate itself from the herd. Death usually follows within a year of the onset of symptoms. No treatment or palliative measures are known.

First recognized in cattle in the United Kingdom in 1986, BSE became epidemic there, particularly in southern England. Cases also were reported in other parts of Europe and in Canada. The disease is similar to the neurodegenerative disease of sheep called scrapie. It is thought to have arisen when cattle were fed high-protein supplements made from ruminant carcasses and offal (the trimmings of butchered animals). Although animal remains had been used as a source of dietary supplements for several decades without problems, modifications to the rendering process—specifically, reduction in the temperatures used and discontinuance of certain solvents—in the early 1980s were followed by the outbreak of BSE. The timing of events suggested that the modified process no longer incapacitated the infectious agent. In 1988, on the basis of this inferred connection, the British government banned the use of animal-derived protein supplements. The following year the U.S. Department of Agriculture banned the import of live ruminants from countries known to have BSE, and in 1997 both the United States and Canada implemented bans on the use of animal-derived proteins in ruminant feed. From 1986 to 2008 nearly 185,000 cases of BSE were confirmed in the United Kingdom. In contrast, through February 2008 a total of just 16 cases of BSE were confirmed in North America, with the majority of cases occurring in Canadian-born cattle. Because of heightened awareness of increasing prevalence of BSE in Canadian cattle, Canada enhanced its feed ban in 2007 to prohibit the inclusion of “specified risk materials,” as well as animal proteins, from all animal feeds.

BSE, scrapie, and similar diseases in other species, such as Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and kuru in humans, are categorized as transmissible spongiform encephalopathies. They are so named because the brain tissue of organisms with the disease becomes pitted with holes in a spongelike pattern. The cause of these diseases is attributed to an unusual infectious agent called a prion. The prion is a modified form of a normally harmless protein found in the brain of mammals and birds. In its aberrant form, however, the prion protein builds up in nerve cells as it multiplies. This accumulation somehow damages these cells and leads to the characteristic neurodegeneration. It is suspected that there also exists an atypical strain of BSE, which arises spontaneously (as opposed to orally through the ingestion of contaminated feed) and leads to a distinct prion disease characterized by a lack of pitted holes in the brain.

After the emergence of BSE, concern grew over a possible relationship between the animal disease and the occurrence of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in people. Beginning in the mid-1990s a new variant form of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (nvCJD) took the lives of dozens of people in Europe. In experiments with mice, researchers found that prions from human cases of nvCJD caused a disease pattern similar to that caused by prions from cows with BSE. The result suggested that the human infection is linked to BSE.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.