Guest guest Posted March 28, 1999 Report Share Posted March 28, 1999 Subj: zoo primates: horrible BSE news Date: 3/28/99 2:53:45 PM Eastern Standard Time From: tom@... (tom) Sender: BSE-L@... (Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy) Reply-to: BSE-L@... (Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy) To: BSE-L@... (Multiple recipients of list BSE-L) The 30 Mar 99 issue of PNAS 96:4046-4051, which is still not quite posted, carries an explosive French study of very high experimental standards (with a Nobel lauriate co-author) about TSE in primates in French zoos using BSE- tainted feed supplements through June, 1996. This is a huge scandal because it potentially affects the survival of many of the world's primate species. In my opinion, it also suggests very strongly that the nvCJD epidemic will indeed be of 'biblical proportions'. [The primates showed contamination of the tonsils, esophagus, gastric glands, duodenum, walls of lymph and blood vessels, Peyer's patches, and spleen, in addition to dorsal and ventral root ganglian, spinal chord and brain. 14 of 26 non-experimental primates had neurological signs; 5/6 autopsies were positive, indicating very high dietary penetrance in a variety of primates.] Shockingly, the British manufacturer had continued to manufacure and distribute this speciality product, possibly to hundreds of zoos on the Continent and possibly worldwide, for 10 years after zoo ungulates and carnivores were diagnosed in England. British zoos apparently continue to export carrier animals worldwide. Equally shocking, French zoos continued to use this feed despite knowning its contaminated source, even though nearly every one of the 234 species of primate is endangered in the wild, zoos are often used to sustain populations, and breeding facilities provide animals for human medical research. Only 8 French zoos and primate breeding facilities out of 89 agreed to cooperate with this study, which simply asked about primate neurological or unexplained deaths and dietary practices. A zoo in Lille acknowledged 3 primate deaths with TSE-like neurological illness. It is highly questionable not to autopsy [or save samples] from valuable animals with unexplained neurological deaths fed known BSE feed, yet this is a big step up from non-cooperation. It seems that French veterinary ethics have a similar standard to those of French medicine (AIDS and hepatitis). But is the problem limited to France and primates? We all know that English zoos have been lying through their teeth [MAFF interfered with kudu and dogs according to the Inquiry, did it stop there: the list of species affected never made any sense given the prion sequences involved]. Whose protein supplement did English zoos use for primates if not the local company's? Why would only French primates go down with TSE? (Explanation: Max the cat was bad enough, how could the UK resume beef exports if they announced Charlie the chimpanzee had BSE?) The products are identified as " Singe 107, MP, or Marex. " Singe 107 (UAR, Paris, France) was previously described as containing " products declared fit for human consumption. " The present article does not identify the companies by name but says, " according to the manufacturers, this food contained various items, including gross protein, fats, corn, soya, carob bean, alfalfa, minerals, yeast, vitamis A, C, D3, and E, and cracklings (the so-called 'fifth quarter of beef' suitable for human the same French distributor. The British manufacturer 'which distributes nutritional supplements to zoos and animal breeding facilities through a French company [and possibly others in other countries]) announced in June, 1996 that it ceased to use beef in its nutritional supplements' which the authors take to mean that they had used beef prior to 'ceasing'. On 6 July 1996, an article appeared in Lancet documenting non-experimental transmission of BSE to primates (in a rhesus monkey that had died in 1992). The 79 primates of 11 species were feed 20-40 gm/kg of these feeds in addition to their usual fruits and vegetables. For a 60 kg human, this works out to 1200-2400 gm. In July 1996, Bons et al. published that a rhesus monkey and two lemurs at the Montpellier zoo had died of TSE. Here they look at an additional 20 lemurs and macaques from 3 French zoos. The zoos had to kill these lemurs anyway because they were primate hybrids, now illegal in France. Two lemurs were symptomatic, 18 were not: all were definitely positive for prion disease. Lemurs and macaques can live for 20+ years, so what this implies is that a great many primates in French zoos are not yet symptomatic but are slowly incubating BSE-based prion disease. We could ask whether the facilities are thoroughly contaminated (like the ones in Colorado), whether only primates are affected, whether only French zoos are affected, whether food 'fit for human consumption' ended up in the human food chain, and indeed, wonder whether there is much of a species barrier at all to humans, given that 5 other species of primate have gone down via the oral route. Corresponging author: ephemcb@... Species used in study: Microcebus murinus# [strepsirhini (prosimians) small, short-lived mouse lemur exposed to BSE brain orally] Eulemur fulvus mayottensis# [prosimian, lemur] Eulemur fulvus albifrons# [prosimian, lemur] Eulemur mongoz# [prosimian, lemur] Eulemus macaco# [prosimian, lemur] Lemur catta# [prosimian, (ring-tailed lemur] Varecia variegata varigata# [prosimian, ruffed lemur] Varecia variegata rubra [prosimian, ruffed lemur] Macaca mulatta#* [old world monkey] Macaca sylvanus* [old world monkey] Macaca fuscata* [old world monkey] Saimiri sciureus#* [new world monkey] #one or more non-experimental BSE-food exposed animal suspected or confirmed. *sequence of prion gene known. 35 other individuals pending further study. =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Spontaneous spongiform encephalopathy in a young adult rhesus monkey The Lancet Volume 348, Number 9019 - Saturday 6 July 1996 Noelle Bons, Nadine Mestre-Francois, Yves Charnay, Fabrizio Tagliavini Sir--Although human and animal prion diseases have been experimentally transmitted to various monkey species, spontaneous occurrence of a spongiform encephalopathy in non-human primates has not been reported. We describe the development of a spongiform encephalopathy without known cause in a rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta). The monkey was born in 1982 and was acquired from Ravensden zoo, Rushend, Northants, UK, in October, 1986, by the zoological park in Montpelier, France where it was housed in the primate colony. In Montpelier, the monkey was fed standard monkey feed including Singe 107 (UAR, Paris, France) which contains meat products declared fit for human consumption. In summer, 1991, aged 9, the previously healthy monkey became lethargic and developed mood changes, in particular, aggressiveness. The monkey became isolated from its companions and hid itself away. In June, 1992, the monkey was anaesthetised... -=-=-=- Oral transmission of BSE to primates Thew Lancet Volume 348, Number 9035 - Saturday 26 October 1996 R M RIdley, H F Baker MRC Comparative Cognition Team, Department of Experimental Psychology UK Sir--In a report to the European Union Commission, Prof C Weissmann of Zurich University has recommended that experiments be set up to investigate oral transmission of BSE to primates to see whether human beings are at risk from eating beef products.1 Bovine spongiform encepholopathy (BSE) has already been transmitted to primates by intracerebral injection of infected brain tissue homogenate2 so the " species barrier " between cattle and primates is not absolute. BSE has also been transmitted by feeding infected brain to mice3 so clearly transmission of this agent by the oral route is possible. During the BSE epidemic not only were cattle fed on contaminated, rendered material, but large numbers of other species in zoos, farms, and domestic ownership were also fed on pelleted food containing rendered material. A few animals of several species of antelope and cat4 but not monkeys5 became affected despite these monkeys being fed for many years on pellets which contained up to four times the amount of the implicated, rendered meat and bone meal that was included in cattle pellets. Thus a " species barrier " of some sort exists between cattle and primates. But will Weissmann be able to quantify this in a way which will have public health implications? In 10 years' time he may be able to determine the smallest amount of raw cow brain necessary to cause disease if fed to perhaps a few dozen monkeys. But what will this tell us about the maximum quantity of bovine-derived material (from which specified offals have been removed) which can be consumed without causing illness when the sample size could be up to 50 million people in the UK? As every drug company knows, extensive tests in clinical trials in large numbers of people cannot ensure that a new drug, when available on general prescription, will not cause serious illness in a handful of patients such that the drug has to be withdrawn. At best Weissmann's experiments will be irrelevant; at worse they will provide a degree of reassurance which is unwarranted. There is nothing that can be done to reduce any risk to which people have been exposed in the past, and there is now no alternative but to do the best we can to eliminate BSE entirely. Failure to transmit bovine spongiform encephalopathy to marmosets with ruminant-derived meal Lancet letter R M Ridley, H F Baker, C P Windle Sir--We have kept a large breeding colony of common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus) for use in neuropsychological research for almost 20 years. This primate species develops spongiform encephalopathy with an incubation period of 3÷5 or 4 years after intracerebral injection of scrapie-affected or bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE)-affected brain homogenate.1 The majority of marmosets in the colony are used for experimental purposes and are killed when under 3 years of age, but the breeding animals are aged 3«10 years and a small number of animals have been kept for up to 15 years in an investigation of ageing.2 All animals are fed a daily diet of egg sandwiches, fruit, and a proprietary brand of UK-produced New World monkey pellets. According to the manufacturers these pellets contained a 20% inclusion of ruminant-derived meat-meal protein until April 1996 (cattle-feed supplements before 1988 contained about 4% of meat and bone meal). From 1985 onwards, ruminant-derived feed probably contained increasing amounts of BSE agent from affected cattle and although the Ruminant Feed Ban of 1988 prohibited the feeding of this material to ruminants, its use in other animal feeds was legal until April 1996. We estimate that more than 100 marmosets born in our colony between 1980 and 1990 lived for more than 5 years and were exposed to ruminant-derived protein in their diet for their entire life. Each adult marmoset (weight 350 g) was fed about 2 g meat meal per day. It seems likely, therefore, that the mature monkeys in our colony were exposed to significant amounts of infective agent for more than 5 years and in some cases for up to 10 years. With the exception of those animals which were injected intracerebrally with infected brain in our primary transmission studies, no animal in our colony has ever developed spongiform encephalopathy. As part of general husbandry all animals are monitored daily for signs of ill-health and any with severe illness or persistent poor condition are killed. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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