Thursday, February 4, 2010

Still S Disease Is Mad Cow Disease Still In The Deer Population In Any State?

Is Mad Cow Disease still in the deer population in any State? - still s disease

I read that the disease of BSE in the deer population of New Mexico was at one point.
Is there a problem? I live in Texas.
And how do you know whether the deer, the disease that causes?

10 comments:

WOP2_99 said...

The disease, BSE is the result of bacteria introduced into spongiform feed. Its unlikely, unless the deer and cattle feed shares of stock as well. It is a degenerative disease in Virginia and other states and indistinguishable from BSE. I read a link.

larry said...

There are two ways the disease BSE. One is given the type of bacteria and the other is the accumulation of prions, food, beef by-products. The symptoms are similar.

All species, including the cannibals of Borneo (!) May have problems of the accumulation of prions. Each bacterial disease to mutate and jump species. They are not two different things.

the long shot said...

The mad cow disease as Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE), one wonders determined whether he ever jumped to humans in spite of the press.

The human form of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD)

Deer CWD is a - (MDC)

http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/huntwild/wil ...

CWD Not Found in Tx.

Annie Oakleaf said...

The disease is called mad cow disease, if found in other animals.

Can be found in cattle, humans, animals and animals of the deer family. They are called the CWD (Chronic Wasting Disease) in deer.

Here is some information about this topic:
Transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE): A family of advanced, incurable, fatal diseases caused by prions. Characterized by dementia, and holes in the brain at autopsy. It can be transmitted between mammals mammals, when eating the parts of the nervous system (eg, brain, spinal cord), other mammals.

Prion (pronounced Pree-on): Together, these diseases is a new infectious agent. This is not a virus or bacterium, but rather an infectious protein, a chain reaction that destroys nerve cells can trigger. It can by most methods of sterilization are inactivated.

Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE): The technical name for the disease BSE - TSE in cattle. The form of BSE in the European herd is probably not the same as in U.S. cattle.

Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD): A human TSE. The classicForm of CJD occur seemingly spontaneously, but the alternative "news" of CJD (nvCJD), which is now known as the human equivalent of the disease, instructed by the consumption of BSE-plan that contaminated meat.

Kuru: Another human TSE, located in the Pacific Islands, which ate the brain of man.

Scrapie: EASTERN found in sheep. The likely source of all animal TSEs
http://www.organicconsumers.org/madcow.c ...



http://www.mad-cow.org/99feb_cwd_special ...
Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD): a spongiform encephalopathy (prion disease) in deer and elk, which is closely associated with the disease BSE, scrapie and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans is related. CWD has been in the mule deer, black reported -- white-tailed deer, elk, moose, Rocky Mountain, and possibly a pronghorn.

The symptoms of chronic wasting disease: http://www.unbc.ca/nlui/wildlife_disease ...
"The symptoms of infected animals May include lack of coordination, separation from other animals in a herd, excessive salivation, depression, unusual behavior, paralysis, WeiGht loss, difficulty swallowing, increased thirst and urination, and pneumonia. Signs usually takes several weeks to several months before the death of the animal, but some animals show no clinical symptoms, with the exception of acute pneumonia. The animals are usually 3 - to 4 years can appear before clinical signs, but as young as 18 months or as old as 13 years. The disease was, in principle, on the basis of clinical symptoms diagnosed and confirmed by isolation of abnormal prion protein during post-mortem examination of the brainstem or lymphoid tissues of affected animals. Recent research, however, suggests that pharyngeal tonsils biopsies could be used to determine the presence of prion proteins in living animals "

Other interesting links:
http://www.emedicinehealth.com/mad_cow_d ...
http://www.ngpc.state.ne.us/wildlife/gui ...

The symptoms of mad cow disease: http://www.wisegeek.com/what-are-the-sym ...

Hangfire said...

Now I read that there had been several cases of deer disease, mad cow disease in Texas, but I have not heard of individual cases, here in West Texas.


More information:
http://www.texashuntfish.com/journals/12 ...

Dana H said...

MDD? (MAD Deer Dis.?)

Some false statements. here.
The last one I received directly from DOW:
Hardly anyone cares about their animals tested in Colorado and began to close the test stations. (I think we still have the largest number of CWD in the country.)
Many tests to see if CWD is transmissible to humans and MTN. Lion (including caged lions feeding infected meat carefully) over a longer period and was sent to a person or a lion.

One can not easily tell by looking at an animal if they are infected until the end of the process (which is 100% fatal for deer.) Test, the samples of brain tissue and / or lymph nodes in the neck.

I stayed after checking my animals .... but not ... Hurd .. HURF me again! Boo ...

dj_class... said...

If the disease BSE is a problem at all would still be something new to them. keep other epidemics, now upon us, how different types of influenza or AIDS. I really need to worry about. Deer shoot whenever you want.

CURIOUS GEORGE said...

Mad Cow Disease is only for cattle, cattle, buffalo and bison. It does not apply to deer.

danny said...

There is nothing like the mad cow disease in wild deer.

dutton_1 said...

No mad cow disease in wild deer

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