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CWD...are we over-reacting?


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I am not making wild satements, this is straight from the Mayo Clinic. Have you heard of them? I posted a link in my original post read their "wild statments". "Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and its variants belong to a broad group of human and animal diseases known as transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs). The name derives from the spongy holes, visible under a microscope, that develop in affected brain tissue. Variant CJD is linked primarily to eating beef infected with bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), the medical term for mad cow disease."-Mayo Clinic

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they aren't the same disease, they are all prion dieseases but not the same.

mad cow, CWD, CJD, and scrapies are all prion diseases. they are not one and the same.

Put steaks of infected meat from any of those in front of me, and I will still not eat it.

Pass the potatoes please. grin

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For example, in the United Ransom the current estimated risk of acquiring vCJD from beef and beef products appears to be about 1 case in 10 billion servings. The risk from beef in other high-incidence countries is estimated to be very low, as well.

the whole reason for the mad cow outbreak in england was because they were feeding protein to cows that was made from dead cows. they ground up dead cows for protein and used it as a protein supplement in their feed. it turned out to be really effective at spreading mad cow disease. this practice has since been outlawed.

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I am quite familiar with the European outbreak. The point is consuming infected meat can spread the disease. An infected deer was shot in Minnesota. It does not matter how the animal was infected, it is transferrable, to humans and other animals. It is here and is nearly indestructible. You can do the math any way you like. I am going to be extra careful.

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I am quite familiar with the European outbreak. The point is consuming infected meat can spread the disease. An infected deer was shot in Minnesota. It does not matter how the animal was infected, it is transferrable, to humans and other animals. It is here and is nearly indestructible. You can do the math any way you like. I am going to be extra careful.

Just because two different species can have a similar disease does NOT mean that they are transferring it to each other.

VHS is the disease found in the great lakes, known to infect and kill many of our state's gamefish. It is why baitfish from Lake Superior now must be specially prepared by permit. Yet the DNR fully states that fish infected with VHS are perfectly fine for human consumption.

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I am not making wild satements, this is straight from the Mayo Clinic. Have you heard of them? I posted a link in my original post read their "wild statments". "Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and its variants belong to a broad group of human and animal diseases known as transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs). The name derives from the spongy holes, visible under a microscope, that develop in affected brain tissue. Variant CJD is linked primarily to eating beef infected with bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), the medical term for mad cow disease."-Mayo Clinic

If Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is the human equivalent of CWD, I think it's safe to say we won't be seeing an epidemic. According to the Minnesota Department of health, in 2009 CJD was responsible for .8 deaths per one million persons.

Doesn't seem to be crazy contagious, does it?

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I am just sharing information I received from a more than credible source. I will not speak to rate of transfer. That is up to mother nature. Wisconsins herd has been positive for the disease for years, but the disease also has a long incubation rate so maybe it hasnt come full circle yet; i do not know. Earlier in this thread some thought it could not spread to humans, and I was accused of making wild statements. One of the greatest Biological research facilities in the world, makes its home in our great state, and they say it can be spread to humans. I believe them.

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I am not making wild satements, this is straight from the Mayo Clinic. Have you heard of them? I posted a link in my original post read their "wild statments". "Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and its variants belong to a broad group of human and animal diseases known as transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs). The name derives from the spongy holes, visible under a microscope, that develop in affected brain tissue. Variant CJD is linked primarily to eating beef infected with bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), the medical term for mad cow disease."-Mayo Clinic

According to your quote, Mayo is saying that BSE can be transferred to humans in the form of vCJD, they don't mention CWD. They are related diseases, but not one and the same.

The odds of transmission may be tiny, maybe even impossible, but I still really don't want to see CWD where I hunt.

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Wow I didn't know so many people were experts in the field of prion disorders. CJD, BSE, CWD all basically are the same disease process caused by prion disorders one in humans, one in cattle, one in deer. There has been transmission of BSE to humans through eating infected meat. Cows died and had spongiform encephalopathy, the people infected died and had spongiform encephalopathy. If the cow version (BSE) can be spread by eating meat and the human version (CJD) can be spread by eating infected humans, it seems safe to assume the CWD could be spread by eating infected deer. And yes you will die a horrible death that strips you of your mind and bodily functions. So again I don't feel the DNR is over reacting and I'm glad they are trying to contain and dispose of this from the MN herd.

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Thank you honker! I am just sharing what I learned from a credible biological research facility. As I previously stated BSE, CWD, CJD, Scabies, whatever you choose to call it, and its variants is a very dangerous disease, and can be transferred to humans. I implore you all to do the research yourselves. This disease cannot be eliminated by any standard sterilization procedure, if you dress an infected animal, the prions stay on your knife and can be transmitted from using the knife again. Please dont take my word for it. Read the Mayo Clinic research. If after you have done your due diligence make your own choice there is a conveinent link to there research in my first post on page one. Dont impune the credibility of the greatest biological research facility on the planet just to prove me wrong.

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Here's a link to research conducted in Colorado:

http://wildlife.state.co.us/NR/rdonlyres/BF3BE1C5-5835-47E3-8737-5AA566AA5245/0/EID_CDWPotTrans.pdf

More info here:

http://wildlife.state.co.us/hunting/biggame/cwd/

Quote:
Simple Precautions Advised

Do not shoot, handle or consume any animal that appears sick; contact the Division of Wildlife in Fort Collins at (970) 472-4300 if you see or harvest an animal that appears sick.

Wear rubber gloves when field dressing and processing animals.

Bone out the meat from your animal.

Minimize the handling of brain and spinal tissues, and wash hands and instruments thoroughly after field-dressing.

Wash hands and instruments thoroughly after field dressing is completed.

Avoid consuming brain, spinal cord, eyes, spleen, tonsils, pancreas and lymph nodes of harvested animals. Normal field dressing, coupled with boning out a carcass, will remove most, if not all, of these body parts. Cutting away all fatty tissue will remove remaining lymph nodes.

Do not consume meat or organs from animals known to be infected with CWD.

Knives, saws and cutting table surfaces can be disinfected by soaking in a solution of 50 percent unscented household bleach and 50 percent water for an hour. Thoroughly rinse all utensils in water to remove the bleach. Afterward, allow them to air dry.

What Portions of Deer, Elk, and Moose Should Be Consumed?

Strong evidence suggests that abnormal proteins, called prions, cause chronic wasting disease in deer and elk. Research indicates that the prions naturally accumulate in certain parts of infected animals -- the brain, eyes, spinal cord, lymph nodes, tonsils, pancreas and spleen- relatively early in the course of disease, well before the animal is visibly ill. In later disease stages, abnormal prions also can accumulate in a wider variety of tissues and organs, including kidney, lung, heart, and muscle.

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Dont impune the credibility of the greatest biological research facility on the planet just to prove me wrong.

Easy now killer. To start I said you may be right but as of now there is ZERO information out there that CWD is transferable to humans. You can make assumptions based on studies of similar diseases but I doubt the Mayo clinic would jump to such conclusions without evidence first. Who knows maybe now that CWD landed in their back yard maybe they will take up the challenge and we can hopefully learn a lot more about this disease.

I am with most everyone, no way I am eating a CWD venison steak and if I lived in the area I would be sure to get my deer tested but I am sure as heck not going to panic and stop eating venison.

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If you hear of anyone in the area that needs help culling the heard, let me know...I will gladly take a few days off for the good of MN deer heard...and my freezer. You have to go sometime, and the last time I checked you really don't have much say when that time is...topdog

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So 20 years back when we likely buried a CWD deer 10 feet under, it never spread that we are aware of, I'd say if you find 2 deer in a given area with CWD get busy with the sharpshooting, otherwise what a waste as CWD has possibly been known or around for 50 years now or longer. If I get a CWD deer might have to wander 25 miles away and say oh I got it here on this state land so blast away, needless slaughtering I believe if 1 is found and can't stomach the stories of does carrying fawns being blown away anymore, the way we cull the herd a goat barely can make it to 3.5 years of age, wouldn't a sick CWD goat kick the bucket and some likely have and we haven't had an epidemic yet. I'm no expert as you just read, lets have any hunter that shoots a questionable deer have it looked over by a pro. Is blasting this 900 deer in SE MN what's it's purpose again ? Wouldn't that sick 1 have already been in some form of contact prior to getting shot with other deer ? If so and there's no spread why blast. Here's the ? If buried by the hunter, no one would know squat in SE MN correct ? Unless it reoccurs. What other states are currently pounding deer in regards to CWD and if it's pen raised issue give them 5 years to abort the operation of selling world class bucks to ranches down south or elk farms where legal high fence is AOK. Heck I'd rather have those 900 tranquilized and released, watch deer 901 would've been the 2nd with CWD but they hit the quota, I hope I eat my words and they shoot 8 with CWD. I do understand the other side truly, if CWD would run rampant at some point our state would become a bigger mess than it already is, wish CWD would turn a deer blue, then we'd be dealing with an easier quarry.

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Musky Buck, just a little tidbit, I guess you aren't supposed to use words like "blown away," "slaughtered," "blasting," "shoot," "shot," or God forbid "kill."

From the press releases from the DNR the politically correct thing is to now say "Depopulate" when talking about CWD. wink

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is it that were over reacting for our own personal health as humans and being sure were okay or are we actually over reacting because we want to be sure the deer are in no harms way because of CWD?

so are we trying to pull off a swineflu thing for the deers sake?

were we as humans over reacting when mad cow and swine flu and all dat [PoorWordUsage] happened? or was it okay just because as humans we dont want any of that to harm us?

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is it that were over reacting for our own personal health as humans and being sure were okay or are we actually over reacting because we want to be sure the deer are in no harms way because of CWD?

so are we trying to pull off a swineflu thing for the deers sake?

were we as humans over reacting when mad cow and swine flu and all dat [PoorWordUsage] happened? or was it okay just because as humans we dont want any of that to harm us?

Good question Handgunner, what is the purpose of testing and monitoring? Are we trying to preserve human health or are we trying to preserve the whitetail population?

On the one hand, there is no evidence that it adversely effects human health. On the other hand, there is no evidence that it adversely effects the whitetail population. Which leads me to the conclusion that it is all a giant waste of time and money.

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I was just throwing out 1 side of thinking some, they should know what's best for the deer, quick ? how many other states finding CWD do what the MN DNR is doing for strategy ? Are elk taken etc. and how with a more nomadic animal how do they...........

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Good question Handgunner, what is the purpose of testing and monitoring? Are we trying to preserve human health or are we trying to preserve the whitetail population?

On the one hand, there is no evidence that it adversely effects human health. On the other hand, there is no evidence that it adversely effects the whitetail population. Which leads me to the conclusion that it is all a giant waste of time and money.

Mad cow disease takes a number of years to manifest itself in humans. CWD is a similar type disease. So far there hasn't been evidence of it manifesting in humans, but there aren't many deer with it yet. It also is hard on the deer. It makes them sick after a few years.

Thus, it seems to me to be a good idea to try to slow its spread in the population, and to try to keep people from consuming infected deer.

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Excellent! The food shelf. Maybe we can continue our Mayo Clinic studies if we trace the packages, and send some of that pineIsland prime rib out! Kinda gotta ring to it! Just like New York Strip!

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My neighbor died of Crietzfeld-whatever. Not very pretty to get holes in your brain.

Not saying thats how he got it, but they did have raw game feeds including Elk from out west. My understanding was 2 out of 3 hunting partners got Creuztfeld-Jacob, not what you would figure with 0.8 in a million odds.

The Scientists promise the raw meat eating was just a coincedence. Ask the British what they think of that!

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