Two hunters 'become first Americans to die from ZOMBIE DEER disease' after eating infected venison

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Suck My Glock

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We are lucky here in AZ, in that CWD has not yet been detected in herds here. But if you hunt in nearby Utah, Colorado or New Mexico, it has been detected there already.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-13323655/first-american-death-human-chronic-wasting-disease-deer.html

Two hunters may have become the first Americans to die from a 'zombie deer' disease.

Experts have been warning for years that the nearly 100 percent fatal chronic wasting disease (CWD) - which leaves deer confused, drooling, and unafraid of humans - could jump from animals to people.

But a new study theorizes that it has already happened - in two hunters who died in 2022 after eating contaminated venison.

One of the victims, a 72-year-old man, suffered 'rapid-onset confusion and aggression,' as well as seizures. He died within a month.

He was diagnosed after his death with Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD), a brain-wasting condition that has been compared to Mad Cow Disease.

The hunter's friend also died from the disease but there were limited details about his condition in the research published last week in the journal Neurology.

The researchers are from Texas but details about where the deaths happened is also not known. DailyMail.com has reached out to the researchers for comment.

CJD is caused by misfolded proteins - when proteins do not fold into the correct shape - called prions.

After infection, prions travel throughout the central nervous system, leaving prion deposits in brain tissues and organs.

Similar to CWD, CJD is caused by misfolded prions, though it most likely afflicts patients at random.

However, researchers believe that due to a history of both hunters eating meat from that infected herd, they could have actually developed CWD.

'Although causation remains unproven, this cluster emphasizes the need for further investigation into the potential risks of consuming CWD-infected deer and its implications for public health,' the team wrote.
The following CDC map shows the counties in which CWD has been detected. This includes 436 counties in 32 states

Research suggests it is possible that prions in CWD attach to elements of the environment may cause prion properties to be modified, including how infectious the disease is and the potential to infect other animal species or even humans.

It may take more than a year for an infected animal to develop symptoms, which can include drastic weight loss, stumbling and listlessness.

CWD is nicknamed 'zombie deer disease' because it causes parts of the brain to slowly degenerate to a spongy consistency and animals will drool and stare blankly before they die.

There are no treatments or vaccines, and the disease is 100 percent fatal.

The exact route of transmission is not fully understood, but it is thought that it is spread animal to animal by eating forage or water contaminated by infected feces or exposure to carcasses.

Direct contact, including saliva, blood, urine and even antler velvet during annual shedding may also contribute to the transmission of the pathogen.

Any deer that dies on a farm must be tested for chronic wasting disease.

Because the disease is so contagious, if one animal test positive, the entire herd is considered infected.

The condition is thought to only infect animals like deer, elk, reindeer, caribou and moose.

Chronic wasting disease was initially discovered in 1967 in Colorado in captive deer.

It has now been found in animals in at least 32 states, four Canadian provinces and four other foreign countries, according to the CDC.

The three states with the largest distribution of CWD-infected deer are Kansas (49 counties), Nebraska (43 counties), and Wisconsin (43 counties).

The most recent case in deer was in Kentucky last fall, according to the Kentucky Department of Fish & Wildlife.
 
I have to ask , how they cooked it ?
Was it well done or rare and bloody like lots of people like ?
I would think if it was cooked well done , it would make a difference.
Then again , I'm not a scientist , but I do like my meat well done.
 
Ballistic Therapy said:
I have to ask , how they cooked it ?
Was it well done or rare and bloody like lots of people like ?
I would think if it was cooked well done , it would make a difference.
Then again , I'm not a scientist , but I do like my meat well done.

Unfortunately, prions are a protein and are not killed or neutralized like a bacteria or a virus by cooking. So venison infected by wasting disease is completely unaffected by cooking. This is why Mad Cow Disease is so feared. You could be served a burger or steak from an infected cow and the cooking would in no way prevent the ill effects of consuming it, nor would it taste any different.
 
Suck My Glock said:
Ballistic Therapy said:
I have to ask , how they cooked it ?
Was it well done or rare and bloody like lots of people like ?
I would think if it was cooked well done , it would make a difference.
Then again , I'm not a scientist , but I do like my meat well done.

Unfortunately, prions are a protein and are not killed or neutralized like a bacteria or a virus by cooking. So venison infected by wasting disease is completely unaffected by cooking. This is why Mad Cow Disease is so feared. You could be served a burger or steak from an infected cow and the cooking would in no way prevent the ill effects of consuming it, nor would it taste any different.

I was in England in the 80's when that appeared, I can't give blood or plasma because of it.

Have a great, gun carryin', Kenpo day

Clyde
 
'Although causation remains unproven, this cluster emphasizes the need for further investigation…”

Seriously? Did I miss something in the article? The cluster is 2 guys and they’re not even sure about one of them. Surprised they didn’t recommend hunters use orange masks until the researchers get a boatload of grant money to investigate. If this WAS an issue I think it might be written up by something other than The Daily Mail. I’ll admit they do find job of reporting on rocks getting really really really close to earth orbit.
 
kenpoprofessor said:

I was in England in the 80's when that appeared, I can't give blood or plasma because of it.

Have a great, gun carryin', Kenpo day

Clyde

No that's to keep your shirts from spreading
 
Lobo2087 said:
kenpoprofessor said:

I was in England in the 80's when that appeared, I can't give blood or plasma because of it.

Have a great, gun carryin', Kenpo day

Clyde

No that's to keep your shirts from spreading
It's too late...😨
 

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