Originally published September 27 2005
Scientists theorize link between funeral rites, mad cow disease
by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, NaturalNews Editor
A study by University of Kent researchers suggests that dead bodies that washed ashore in India, after floating downriver as part of a funeral procession, may have contaminated animal feed that was exported to the United Kingdom, thereby triggering Mad Cow Disease, ABC News reports.
- Dead bodies washed ashore in India may have contaminated animal feed that was exported to the United Kingdom, triggering mad cow disease, scientists say.
- The cause of mad cow disease, or bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), which infected an estimated 2 million cattle during an epidemic, in the UK is unknown.
- It is thought to have resulted from cattle being fed material containing remains of sheep infected with the disease scrapie.
- But Professor Alan Colchester of the University of Kent says it may have been caused by the tonnes of animal bones and other tissue imported from India for animal feed.
- Scrapie, BSE and CJD are all illnesses caused by brain proteins that transform themselves into infectious agents.
- Professor Colchester and his daughter Nancy, of the University of Edinburgh, say that many human and animal corpses are disposed of in rivers in India in line with Hindu custom.
- The remains wash ashore in poor areas where bone collectors work.
- "We are aware of a considerable risk of the incorporation of human remains with the animal remains that are collected - they are processed locally and some have been exported," Professor Colchester said.
- Scientists believe humans acquired variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD) from eating meat from infected cattle.
- Since vCJD was first detected in the mid-1990s, more than 150 people have died of the illness.
- The scientists say the risk of a load of animal byproducts being infected with human material would be very small.
- But importing animal material went on for decades so the cumulative risk could become significant over time.
- "Scientists must proceed cautiously when hypothesising about a disease that has such wide geographic, cultural and religious implications," Professor Shankar says.
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