- Paul Brown
- Medical director, United States Public Health Service Laboratory of Central Nervous System Studies, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA
The link is unproved, but no better explanation is presently forthcoming
The identification of 10 cases of a highly stereotyped clinicopathological variant of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in adolescents and young adults occurring in Britain within the past 24 months (R G Will, J Ironside, et al, personal communication) is cause for serious rethinking about the possibility of human infection from bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE).
Typically, “sporadic” (idiopathic) cases of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease begin in the sixth or seventh decade of life with a loss of memory or, less commonly, with behavioural changes or higher cortical function deficits such as dysphasia or dyslexia. Over several weeks the mental deterioration progresses to frank dementia in association with abnormalities of vision or coordination, rigidity, and involuntary movements (especially myoclonic jerks), which often occur in synchrony with periodic spike waves on electroencephalography.2 Death usually occurs within six months, and at necropsy the brain shows a pathognomonic spongiosis with neuronal loss and gliosis in …
Sign in
Personal subscribers, sign in here:
Article access
Article access for 1 day
Purchase this article for £20 $30 €32*
The PDF version can be downloaded as your personal record
CiteULike
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook
Reddit
Technorati
Twitter
Stumbleupon
Rapid responses
Latest Responses
Re: How much of a social media profile can doctors have?
Published 13 February 2012
Re: Diagnosis and management of Raynaud’s phenomenon
Published 13 February 2012
Re: Is it unethical for doctors to encourage healthy adults to donate a kidney to a stranger? No
Published 13 February 2012
Re: Report predicts 20 million AIDS orphans in Africa by 2010
Published 13 February 2012
Re: On the impossibility of being expert
Published 13 February 2012
Most responses
Does anyone understand the government’s plan for the NHS? (17 responses)
Published 17 Jan 2012
Bad medicine: medical nutrition (15 responses)
Published 18 Jan 2012
Shared decision making: really putting patients at the centre of healthcare (8 responses)
Published 27 Jan 2012
How much of a social media profile can doctors have? (7 responses)
Published 23 Jan 2012
Why legislation is necessary for my health reforms (7 responses)
Published 1 Feb 2012