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New info on Chronic Wasting Disease
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<blockquote data-quote="ImBillT" data-source="post: 3094223" data-attributes="member: 117715"><p>That does not explain how it got out of the pens. But it did, and it has continued to increase in prevalence in the surrounding areas ever since. It has also shown up in high fence ranches in TX, and then adjacent properties, and then slowly expanding outward. That doesn't hold with a diet or soil type explanation. </p><p></p><p>Also, it seems to me, an untrained individual, that excess manganese or insufficient copper would not be transmissible, and might be treatable. Scrapie, and CWD are both transmissible via rather casual interaction between individuals of the respective species, as well as transmissible to other species in the lab via brain probes. The same holds for humans. CJD has unfortunately been accidentally transmitted from human to human in hospital settings.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ImBillT, post: 3094223, member: 117715"] That does not explain how it got out of the pens. But it did, and it has continued to increase in prevalence in the surrounding areas ever since. It has also shown up in high fence ranches in TX, and then adjacent properties, and then slowly expanding outward. That doesn’t hold with a diet or soil type explanation. Also, it seems to me, an untrained individual, that excess manganese or insufficient copper would not be transmissible, and might be treatable. Scrapie, and CWD are both transmissible via rather casual interaction between individuals of the respective species, as well as transmissible to other species in the lab via brain probes. The same holds for humans. CJD has unfortunately been accidentally transmitted from human to human in hospital settings. [/QUOTE]
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