http://www.cbc.ca/story/canada/national/2006/08/23/mad-cow060-823.html
If it's not another Canadian Soldier getting killed by a suicide maniac, it's another case of Mad Cow.
Details below
Canada reports new case of mad cow disease
Last Updated Wed, 23 Aug 2006 13:25:17 EDT
CBC News
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency confirmed a new case of mad cow disease in Alberta on Wednesday.
It is Canada's fifth case in 2006 and the eighth since 2003, when the disease was first found in this country, officials said.
This year's total has included two other cows from Alberta and one each from British Columbia and Manitoba.
Fear of infection has disrupted Canada's beef and cattle exports for long periods, even though the number of cases is dwarfed by those in Britain and some of the two dozen other countries where the disease has been found.
CFIA said the latest dead cow is believed to have been old enough to have contracted the disease — known formally as bovine spongiform encephalopathy or BSE — before Canada banned the use of cattle parts in cattle feed.
The disease is thought to be spread mainly in contaminated feed. It attacks its victims through hard-to-destroy protein forms called prions, which can multiply in the brain, reducing it to a spongy wreck.
The risk of transmission to humans who consume meat from infected animals remains unclear.
No part of the latest cow's carcass entered the human food or animal feed systems, CFIA said.
Say--I scooped farmers_son again.
Whatever happened to him? I didn't like him and his liberal ideas anyway.
If it's not another Canadian Soldier getting killed by a suicide maniac, it's another case of Mad Cow.
Details below
Canada reports new case of mad cow disease
Last Updated Wed, 23 Aug 2006 13:25:17 EDT
CBC News
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency confirmed a new case of mad cow disease in Alberta on Wednesday.
It is Canada's fifth case in 2006 and the eighth since 2003, when the disease was first found in this country, officials said.
This year's total has included two other cows from Alberta and one each from British Columbia and Manitoba.
Fear of infection has disrupted Canada's beef and cattle exports for long periods, even though the number of cases is dwarfed by those in Britain and some of the two dozen other countries where the disease has been found.
CFIA said the latest dead cow is believed to have been old enough to have contracted the disease — known formally as bovine spongiform encephalopathy or BSE — before Canada banned the use of cattle parts in cattle feed.
The disease is thought to be spread mainly in contaminated feed. It attacks its victims through hard-to-destroy protein forms called prions, which can multiply in the brain, reducing it to a spongy wreck.
The risk of transmission to humans who consume meat from infected animals remains unclear.
No part of the latest cow's carcass entered the human food or animal feed systems, CFIA said.
Say--I scooped farmers_son again.
Whatever happened to him? I didn't like him and his liberal ideas anyway.
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