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HOME > PAST ISSUE > July-August 2004 > Article Detail

FEATURE ARTICLE

Mad-Cow Disease in Cattle and Human Beings

Bovine spongiform encephalopathy provides a case study in how to manage risks while still learning the facts

Paul Brown

BSE Origins

The origin of BSE may never be known with certainty, but any satisfactory explanation must answer two fundamental questions. Why did BSE begin in the mid 1980s? And why did it begin in Great Britain?

It is generally believed that cattle were infected by eating contaminated dietary supplements made from the carcasses of infected animals. The timing of the mad-cow outbreak seems to coincide with two changes made in the system of rendering livestock carcasses into animal feed during the late 1970s. First, the process of liquefying separate batches of carcasses into greaves (a water-soluble proteinaceous slurry) and tallow (a water-insoluble fat) was largely replaced by a process in which carcasses moved continuously through the rendering equipment, which could have resulted in uneven or incomplete exposure to heat. Second, a terminal extraction of greaves with hydrocarbon solvents under steam to extract a small amount of residual tallow was eliminated.

Although experiments suggest that neither change by itself had a great effect, their combination may well have contributed to survival of the infectious agent. If the level of infectivity was near the threshold of transmission, even small changes in the agent’s survival rate could have made the difference. Supporting evidence comes from the fact that the prohibition of meat-and-bone-meal dietary supplements in 1987 was followed 5 years later by a downturn in BSE cases. This is what would be expected if the supplements were the source of the infection, since 5 years is the average incubation period between BSE infection and manifest illness.

Figure 5. Two cattle-derived products . . .Click to Enlarge Image

The use of dietary supplements made from cattle and sheep was widespread in the 1980s. Livestock species (sheep, pigs and chickens), several kinds of zoo animals, laboratory animals and pets also received feed that was supplemented with meat-and-bone meal. Fortunately, not all of these animals are susceptible to TSE. However, TSE does appear to have been transmitted by feed to ungulates (including bison and some zoo exotics, such as gemsbok, eland and kudu), felines (including lions, tigers, cheetahs and pet cats) and primates (lemurs and rhesus monkeys). Pigs are not at risk for oral BSE infection, and chickens and dogs appear to be resistant to infection by any route.

It is still not certain whether the infected feed was made from the remains of sheep or cattle. A species-crossing infection from sheep with scrapie is the leading hypothesis. Accurate figures for the international prevalence of scrapie are not available (farmers are generally reluctant to report it), but the disease is certainly widespread in Britain, which has a relatively large ratio of sheep to cattle. Thus a pervasive potential source of infection had already existed in Britain, whereas BSE was unknown until the epidemic began in 1986. Moreover, the argument that an unrecognized spontaneous case of BSE served as the founder of the BSE outbreak has a formidable obstacle. Sporadic cases of BSE could not have been occurring only in Britain, and yet no coincident epidemics occurred in other countries (such as the U.S.) that changed their rendering processes at about the same time. Moreover, the distribution of early BSE cases in Britain (and other countries that unwittingly imported BSE from Britain) is consistent with multiple initiation sites rather than a single-point source of infection. This favors sheep as the source of the infection because scrapie was prevalent and could easily have entered several rendering plants throughout Britain, whereas the spontaneous BSE cases would have had to arise almost simultaneously throughout the country.

To be fair, it should be mentioned that the sporadic-BSE hypothesis more easily explains two curious features of the disease. Like most infectious pathogens, the scrapie agent has many distinguishable strains, but BSE seems to be caused by a single strain. Although there is precedence for strain selection when a pathogen crosses from one species to another, a bovine origin for BSE eliminates the need for this kind of selection process. The other distinguishing feature of BSE is that it is transmissible to human beings, whereas all evidence to date suggests that scrapie is not. Why should the passage of scrapie through a bovine species change its pathogenicity for human beings? As a matter of fact, an analogous phenomenon has been experimentally documented: BSE can infect mice directly but is unable to infect hamsters unless first passed through mice. However, because this kind of interspecies behavior is exceptional, most scientists believe that the balance of evidence points to scrapie as the source of BSE.

If scrapie were the infectious source of the disease in cattle, it raises the possibility that the BSE agent could complete the circle by going back to sheep in infected feed. This would be especially disturbing because in the process of "back-crossing" to sheep, the agent might carry its newly acquired ability to infect humans. It is presently impossible to detect such back-crossing because the clinical, pathological and molecular biological manifestations of the disease in experimentally infected sheep are indistinguishable from native versions of scrapie.

Figure 4. Incidence of bovine spongiform encephalopathy . . .Click to Enlarge Image

Variant CJD is the fourth member of the CJD family—sporadic and inherited forms of CJD were first described in the 1920s, and iatrogenic CJD (caused by medical procedures) was recognized in the 1970s. The first clue that something new was happening was the appearance of a distinctive form of spongiform encephalopathy in adolescents and young adults in a country still recovering from a vast epidemic of spongiform encephalopathy in cattle. A connection between BSE and the human cases was strongly suggested, and has since been experimentally confirmed by the molecular similarity of their misfolded proteins, which are distinct from those of all other TSEs. The clinical and pathological features of vCJD also differ from those of sporadic CJD. Instead of the usual onset of memory loss and incoordination that characterize sporadic CJD, patients with vCJD present with psychiatric problems and complain of sensory symptoms such as pain, numbness or "pins and needles." Their illness lasts longer (on average, about 14 months, instead of 4 months for the sporadic disease), and at autopsy their brains contain myriad "daisy plaques"—deposits of misfolded amyloid protein surrounded by "petals" of spongy tissue that are not seen in the sporadic disease.

 Human infections most probably resulted from the ingestion of beef products that were contaminated with central nervous system tissue; however, this hypothesis still lacks the kind of laboratory evidence that clinched the identification of BSE as the source of infection. Furthermore, epidemiological studies have not uncovered any convincing disease clusters or pointed to any regional peculiarities that might link contact with BSE-infected cattle to human cases of the disease. Investigations of supposed high-risk groups, such as farmers, slaughterhouse workers and butchers, have not found any cases of vCJD.

Because physical contact with infected cattle could not be implicated, the next logical possibility was exposure to cattle products. This has proved to be difficult to assess because in one way or another virtually the entire British population is exposed to a large number of bovine-derived products. Consumption of meat and dairy products and exposure to products containing either tallow or gelatin (or their derivatives) is nearly universal. No correlation has been established between vCJD and exposure to any particular product.

The most plausible hypothesis points to slaughterhouse practices and meat preparation—about which the scientific community was completely naive—as the key to the transmission of the disease. Before the appearance of BSE, vertebral columns were routinely included in the remains of carcasses from which as much meat as possible had been removed. Spinal cords were usually removed, but cord fragments and spinal ganglia were certainly present. These truncated carcasses were then subjected to a process of compression to yield a paste of "mechanically recovered meat." This paste was often added to a variety of packaged meat products—hot dogs, sausages, beef patties, luncheon meats and beef stews—in proportions as high as 30 percent, but usually in the range of 5 to 10 percent. It is now abundantly clear that central nervous system tissues were entering the human food chain through this "unadvertised" paste, and that this was the most likely vehicle of infection.

Figure 6. Age at onset of illness . . .Click to Enlarge Image

That said, two very curious phenomena remain unexplained. The most puzzling is the relatively young age at which the disease appears: The great majority of vCJD cases have been in people under the age of 30, which is in stark contrast to sporadic CJD, which typically affects the 50-to-70-year-old age group. Two explanations have been proposed. The first calls into play the normal aging process of the immune  system. As children mature, some elements  of the immune system undergo atrophy, inducing lymphatic tissue elements scattered throughout the small intestine (called Peyer’s patches). These tissues are known to be  involved at a very early stage of oral BSE infections, and their atrophy in adulthood could provide a degree of comparative resistance. The second possibility concerns dietary differences between age groups. Children and adolescents are probably more likely than adults to eat comparatively inexpensive products (including school cafeteria offerings) that contain mechanically recovered meat. However, information about the distribution and consumption of commercial foods, which might provide the best clues, is unreliable, and the dietary histories of patients with vCJD obtained from their relatives are similarly suspect.

Figure 7. Amyloid plaque . . .Click to Enlarge Image

The other puzzle concerns the relatively small number of cases. Presumably, the potentially contaminated beef products were distributed throughout the British population of 60 million, yet fewer than 150 cases have been identified over a period of nearly 10 years of active surveillance, and only a handful of cases have appeared in countries where BSE was exported. Although genetic susceptibility may play a role, the most reasonable explanation is that infectivity was very unevenly distributed among the meat products and only rarely achieved a transmissible level. Transmission would have been made even more difficult by the comparative inefficiency of oral infections.





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