New Mad Cow Test on the Horizon?
pin_gween writes "Prions are thought to be responsible for mad cow disease and its human variant, Creutzfeld-Jakob disease. Until now, the only way to positively ID those infected was to dissect the brain. Canada.com has an AP wire reporting that researchers at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston have 'developed a method of multiplying the number prions in a blood sample so a blood test then can detect them.' If perfected, it would make the blood supply safer; transfusions can spread the disease between people. It could also open up more blood donations for the Red Cross: in the U.S., people who have spent more than 3 months total (since 1980) in the UK or 6 months total (since 1980) in Europe are banned from donating."
will it determine if the woman I am about to marry will turn into a mad cow down the track.... now that would truely be a useful test.
cow1: Do you worry about mad cow disease?
cow2: Why should I? I'm a rabbit.
So with over 80% of Americans not even having a passport, is that really a problem?
I'm an American who lived in Europe for six years. From the time I returned to the US, until the ban was enacted, I was able to donate blood on a regular basis. I was surprised, when I was filling out the standard donation questioneer, to find that they had changed the rules, and I was suddenly unable to donate. Does this really make any sense at all? Are Europeans not donating blood? Has there been a single documented case of someone contracting Mad Cow through a blood donation? If so, are the risks of getting it worse than those of not having an adequate blood supply?
Just another day in Paradise
The poster is wrong in stating that anyone who has lived 6 months or more in Europe cannot give blood. It's not actually that strict. The full details are here: RC Donor Eligibility.
"The facts are..."
"+1 interesting" as it may be, from that point on the parent was utterly wrong.
Some definitions: TSE is the general name of the TYPE of disease. Bovine Spongiform Encephalitis (BSE), or "Mad Cow's Disease", is the specific name of the disease as it appears in bovine, or cows. Creutzfeldt-Jakob (CJD) disease is the specific name of the disease at it appears in people.
Some common points of confusion:
-Grym
Sorry, you fail.
Pop quiz buddy. You are about to die. You need blood. You have a choice. DIE, or take the blood of a person who might, maybe, possibly, if 7,000,000,000 things went just right have a stray prion in his system, which might just might transfer to you and then 25 years from now cause you to die of nvCJD.
What do you choose. Death today, or death 25 years from now.
The policy is stupid. It kills people. The blood supply is severely strained as a result.
The definition of a rare blood type is not AB-, it is the type of blood you need when you need it and it is not there.
Less than 200 people have died of nvCJD in the world in the last 30 years.
Anyone worried about catching it and dying may as well shoot themselves right now, cause they are also worried to death about getting every other disease on the planet except for the ones that might actually kill them (like the flu).
GRRRR
God: "I don't leave footprints!"