TOKYO (AP) - A cow in northern Japan is suspected of being the country's 19th case of mad cow disease, an official said Wednesday.
Preliminary tests on the animal at a slaughterhouse in Hokkaido prefecture were positive, and authorities sent samples to two laboratories in the prefecture for more precise tests, a Hokkaido prefectural official said on condition of anonymity. He declined to elaborate. Kyodo News agency said final test results could be announced by Saturday.
Japan has found 18 animals infected with the fatal illness - known formally as bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or BSE - since the first case was detected in 2001. Since then, Tokyo has checked every slaughtered cow before it enters the food supply since 2001, after its first discovery of mad cow disease.
In February, Japan confirmed its first human case of mad cow disease following the death of a man with symptoms of the illness. Japanese health authorities have said it was likely the man contracted the disease while living for a month in Britain - where mad cow first surfaced - in 1989.
Japan banned U.S. beef imports after the first case of mad cow was confirmed in Washington state last December.
Amid pressure from Washington, a Japanese government panel earlier this month took a step toward partially lifting a ban on U.S. beef imports, but the decision still has to be approved by the government.
Eating beef from an infected cattle is thought to cause the fatal variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans.
http://www.canada.com/health/story.html?id=593347d1
Japan Discovers 19th Case of Mad Cow Disease
Japan Discovers 19th Case of Mad Cow Disease
CVX wrote: TOKYO (AP) - A cow in northern Japan is suspected of being the country's 19th case of mad cow disease, an official said Wednesday.
Preliminary tests on the animal at a slaughterhouse in Hokkaido prefecture were positive, and authorities sent samples to two laboratories in the prefecture for more precise tests, a Hokkaido prefectural official said on condition of anonymity. He declined to elaborate. Kyodo News agency said final test results could be announced by Saturday.
Japan has found 18 animals infected with the fatal illness - known formally as bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or BSE - since the first case was detected in 2001. Since then, Tokyo has checked every slaughtered cow before it enters the food supply since 2001, after its first discovery of mad cow disease.
In February, Japan confirmed its first human case of mad cow disease following the death of a man with symptoms of the illness. Japanese health authorities have said it was likely the man contracted the disease while living for a month in Britain - where mad cow first surfaced - in 1989.
Japan banned U.S. beef imports after the first case of mad cow was confirmed in Washington state last December.
Amid pressure from Washington, a Japanese government panel earlier this month took a step toward partially lifting a ban on U.S. beef imports, but the decision still has to be approved by the government.
Eating beef from an infected cattle is thought to cause the fatal variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans.
http://www.canada.com/health/story.html?id=593347d1
Well now I would like to take this opportunity to personally tell them where to go and how to get there after rejecting our beef and crippling our market 2 years ago. Hurrumph.
Preliminary tests on the animal at a slaughterhouse in Hokkaido prefecture were positive, and authorities sent samples to two laboratories in the prefecture for more precise tests, a Hokkaido prefectural official said on condition of anonymity. He declined to elaborate. Kyodo News agency said final test results could be announced by Saturday.
Japan has found 18 animals infected with the fatal illness - known formally as bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or BSE - since the first case was detected in 2001. Since then, Tokyo has checked every slaughtered cow before it enters the food supply since 2001, after its first discovery of mad cow disease.
In February, Japan confirmed its first human case of mad cow disease following the death of a man with symptoms of the illness. Japanese health authorities have said it was likely the man contracted the disease while living for a month in Britain - where mad cow first surfaced - in 1989.
Japan banned U.S. beef imports after the first case of mad cow was confirmed in Washington state last December.
Amid pressure from Washington, a Japanese government panel earlier this month took a step toward partially lifting a ban on U.S. beef imports, but the decision still has to be approved by the government.
Eating beef from an infected cattle is thought to cause the fatal variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans.
http://www.canada.com/health/story.html?id=593347d1
Well now I would like to take this opportunity to personally tell them where to go and how to get there after rejecting our beef and crippling our market 2 years ago. Hurrumph.
�You only live once, but if you do it right, once is enough.�
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• Mae West
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Japan Discovers 19th Case of Mad Cow Disease
minks wrote: Well now I would like to take this opportunity to personally tell them where to go and how to get there after rejecting our beef and crippling our market 2 years ago. Hurrumph.Thought Japs eat fish:D
Japan Discovers 19th Case of Mad Cow Disease
lucky for them it was a mad cow, and not a spice cow!!!
Japan Discovers 19th Case of Mad Cow Disease
capt_buzzard wrote: Thought Japs eat fish:D
Me thinks they eat everything.
Me thinks they eat everything.
�You only live once, but if you do it right, once is enough.�
• Mae West
• Mae West
Japan Discovers 19th Case of Mad Cow Disease
john8pies wrote: lucky for them it was a mad cow, and not a spice cow!!!
Funny yoiu J8P
Funny yoiu J8P
�You only live once, but if you do it right, once is enough.�
• Mae West
• Mae West