Seek medical care if you are experiencing any of the signs and symptoms such as memory problems or muscle control, especially in younger individuals who may have been exposed to prion infection.
You can make choices to lower your risk for contracting vCJD from contaminated beef:
Human prion diseases are devastating and incurable, but very rare. Fears that an epidemic of the animal disease (BSE) would lead to an epidemic of the human form (vCJD) have not occurred, even in the UK where entire herds of diseased cattle were destroyed and over 180,000 animals were known to develop the disease.
Yet the general public and researchers alike remain uncertain about the implications of BSE for human disease. If the prion disease takes many years to cause symptoms in people who have been infected and not know it, the number of cases may increase in the years ahead.
According to the CDC, as of December 1, 2003, a total of 153 cases of vCJD had been reported in the world: 143 from the United Kingdom; 6 from France; and one each from Canada, Ireland, Italy, and the United States. (Note: the Canadian, Irish, and US cases were reported in persons who resided in the UK during a key exposure period of the UK population to the BSE agent.)
Computer modeling predicted between fewer than 100 to as many as 136,000 people could die from vCJD in the United Kingdom, while another study predicts that the number of cases has reached its peak. Uncertainty remains about the ultimate course of the outbreak, according to the US Department of Agriculture.
The US government has implemented a number of measures to prevent BSE from entering the US and to prevent the spread of the disease, as outlined by the Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS). Some of these measures include the following:
Current testing in the US only samples a small number of brains from all cattle slaughtered for human consumption. Testing of brain tissue takes more than a week to deliver results. This testing is done only after the animal has been presented for slaughter.
European countries use fast tests to screen many more slaughtered cattle than is done in the US. Results are obtained overnight as carcasses await approval in refrigerated warehouses before entering the food stream.
Live animal tests may provide valuable information about the level of BSE in all animals, including downer cattle and cattle aged 24 months or older (those most at risk and in whom BSE is found). However, currently there is no sensitive and reliable live animal test for BSE.
Thus, given the limitations of the tests available today, certain tissues of cattle infected with BSE may contain the BSE agent before a diagnostic test could indicate that the animal has BSE. Therefore, there is a great need for a sensitive and reliable test that can be done on live animals or on cattle that have been slaughtered.