Gambetti et al USA Prion Unit change another highly suspect USA mad cow 
victim to another fake name i.e. sporadic FFI at age 16 CJD Foundation goes 
along with this BSe 
Published: Jan 13, 2013 05:36 PM Modified: Jan 13, 2013 05:38 PM 
At last, answers to a mother’s grief Cary teen died of extremely rare 
disease 
By Andrew Kenney, akenney@newsobserver.com 
By Andrew Kenney Cary News 
It wasn’t bacteria or a virus that plagued young Michael Mendy’s body and 
mind. He did not inherit his symptoms from his mother or father. Nothing toxic 
was in his blood. And while he was sick, Michael’s parents had no explanation. 
“I had to figure it out. I had to find an answer. I had to find a doctor 
that could help him,” said Michael’s mother, Kathleen Mendy, who lives in 
western Cary. “You don’t think you’re going to come across something that 
nobody’s ever seen.” 
But they had. Dozens of specialists and three years of suffering brought no 
diagnosis. Michael died a year ago, at age 16. And only then did the explanation 
and the terrible significance of his case emerge. 
Doctors estimate that fewer than one in 100 million young people will share 
Michael’s journey. The sports nut and East Cary Middle School student was killed 
by a disease that mostly afflicts the elderly. 
Michael was a heart-wrenching outlier, apparently among the youngest ever 
to suffer a spontaneous ravaging of the brain. 
The onset 
Kathleen Mendy thinks it started on Michael’s 13th birthday in 2009. 
On that January day, another boy knocked Michael’s head to the court during 
a basketball game. He was playing again a minute later, his mother watching with 
a tinge of worry. 
The symptoms of a years-long illness crept in that weekend, during a 
mother-son Super Bowl trip to Florida. That’s where she first saw Michael’s 
confusion, his unsure movements and his inexplicable crying. 
It seemed at first like the troubling wake of the teen’s second concussion 
in three months, but that theory would erode and change. Across the next three 
years, in a nightmare that kept unfolding, the brawny teenager would drop almost 
half his body weight, spend months in the hospital, lose his speech and lay 
debilitated by simple infections. 
The printed record of Michael’s hospital visits and test appointments is 
three and a half pages long. It documents an increasingly desperate search, 
listing 140 days in the hospital, 91 visits with doctors and 426 therapy 
appointments from 2009 to 2012. 
“I always thought he would get better,” Kathleen Mendy said. “I used to 
always tell him, ‘Michael, one day you’re just going to run out of your bedroom, 
and you’re going to come running downstairs, and you’re going to be all better.’ 
” 
The turning point wouldn’t come. 
While his friends went on to high school, Michael was confined to a 
wheelchair and fed through a tube. His care grew so intense that his mother 
brought on a full-time medical aide. 
His father, divorced from his mother, drove in from Florida each time he 
entered the hospital, and Kathleen Mendy’s family often visited from New York. 
Each treatment was more esoteric than the last. By the end of 2011, the 
Mendys had seen more than 30 doctors, medical specialists, faith healers and 
alternative practitioners. 
“I tried chiropractors, reflexology, myofacial therapy,” Kathleen Mendy 
said. “I tried everything.” 
‘I’m so glad I didn’t know’ 
The realization came to Kathleen Mendy on the last night of January 2012, 
the 22nd day that Michael spent in a UNC hospital bed. 
He’d been kept alive in an intensive-care unit by a breathing machine while 
an infection took hold of his lungs. The mysterious disorder had left his body 
unable to respond. 
The memory shakes Kathleen Mendy to tears. The scene sticks in her mind. 
“Not until the night before he died, is when, honestly, it hit me,” she 
recalled. 
The doctors laid a choice before his parents that night. Michael could go 
home with a tracheotomy and a ventilator, but they believed he’d live just a few 
months longer. Or doctors could remove him from life support. 
Michael’s parents didn’t want him to suffer anymore. He died on Feb. 1, 
2012. 
Only months later would Michael’s family learn the reason for his 
degradation and death. An autopsy showed that the teenager died of sporadic 
fatal insomnia, a subtype of Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease. 
“I’m so glad I didn’t know what it was” before Michael died, Kathleen Mendy 
said. “Because then I wouldn’t have had hope.” 
‘A descent into hell’ 
“This disease is a descent into hell,” said Florence Kranitz, president of 
The Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease Foundation in New York City. 
She saw her own husband die in 2001 of an ailment similar to Michael’s. 
Since then she has heard the stories of many of the 300 CJD victims her 
organization identifies each year, including cases of fatal insomnia. 
“We get this phone call, and tragically it’s the same phone call over and 
over again,” Kranitz said. “They’ve never heard of this disease.” 
The story she heard from Kathleen Mendy fit the profile, with one beguiling 
exception. Almost everyone afflicted by CJD subtypes are older than 45, except 
those who contract a variant of the disease genetically or through contaminated 
beef, which Michael had not. 
Michael’s case quickly drew the attention of national experts, including 
Pierluigi Gambetti, director of the National Prion Disease Pathology 
Surveillance Center in Ohio. Gambetti, a pioneering researcher, examined 
Michael’s brain and in April identified his disease as sporadic fatal insomnia. 
He’d later take hours to talk with Kathleen Mendy about her son’s death. 
Sporadic fatal insomnia and CJD, he explained, are part of the still-mysterious 
field of neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s. 
Some of these ravages of the brain, such as so-called “Mad Cow,” begin with 
an infection of prions, or pathogenic proteins, from the outside. CJD in the 
young also can be caused by prions, often transmitted during surgery. 
Like a virus, a prion can essentially “breed.” The virus hijacks human 
cells, and the prion reshapes other proteins into its own mutated form. And when 
a prion or virus propagates enough, it can destroy its host. 
But there’s a crucial difference: The prion also can come from within. 
Gambetti believes that Michael’s disease began when the boy’s brain misfolded a 
protein, creating a prion instead. The defect may then have multiplied out of 
control and ruined the delicate balance of the body. 
It’s not uncommon for the body to make mistakes. Neurons and other cells 
normally catch and eliminate prions before they replicate. These defensive 
systems may grow weaker with age; some people may also inherit weaker defenses. 
But Michael was a teenager, with no apparent family history of 
neurodegenerative diseases. Gambetti put the odds of such a case at one in 100 
million in the general population; another doctor said it was one in 600 
million. 
In fact, Michael may be among the youngest ever to be affected by a 
neurodegenerative disease without an inherited or outside cause. 
“We just haven’t seen this disease affect someone this young,” said John 
Trojanowski, a professor of geriatric medicine at the University of 
Pennsylvania. 
Gambetti, who played a key role in the discovery of fatal insomnia, 
theorizes that Michael’s illness was random, despite the odds. It may be that, 
by chance or some unknown factor, Michael’s brain perfectly bred its own 
pathogen. 
“The bodies of all animals are a marvel of things, in positive and 
negative,” Gambetti said. “They can do things striking for the good, but also 
for the bad.” 
Looking to others 
Nearly a year after Michael’s death, Kathleen Mendy finds love and support 
from family, friends and Compassionate Friends, a local group. But the extreme 
rarity of Michael’s case is isolating. 
When she attended a CJD conference last summer with her twin sister, they 
met the families of people who had mostly died in middle and old age. 
Some nights she goes up to her only child’s room. It’s lined with dozens of 
sports team caps and trophies. Athletes’ names are still painted on the blades 
of his ceiling fan, and the UNC comforter is still on his bed. 
All that’s new is the shrine on the desk, where Michael’s photo stands near 
a glazed statue of praying hands. 
“Sometimes I think I’m OK, and other times it’s like it just happened last 
night. It’s like a rollercoaster,” Kathleen Mendy said. 
She may have as many logical answers now as she’ll ever get – a medical, if 
not a spiritual description of why Michael died. 
She still doesn’t know what it was that made her son vulnerable. She 
believes Michael’s concussions triggered his illness, but his doctors haven’t 
confirmed the idea. 
“I’m a little bit resolved that I’ll never hear the answer,” she said. “It 
would be nice to know, but if I don’t know it, it’s not what matters now.” 
She finds hope instead in the idea that she could help others; she’s 
thinking of writing a book and becoming a public advocate for those who suffer 
with CJD. 
Meanwhile, as Michael’s birthday and the first anniversary of his death 
approach, Gambetti and one of Michael’s former doctors are preparing to present 
his case to their respective medical communities. As painful as the case is, 
“its rarity may contribute to expand the knowledge on this terrible disease,” 
according to Gambetti. 
He hopes his research will one day allow much earlier diagnosis and 
treatment of fatal insomnia. Such a breakthrough could key medical progress 
across the spectrum of prion-related diseases, which are fatal in practically 
all cases. 
Gambetti’s research into Michael’s case will soon yield a more immediate 
result too: He’ll be able to tell caregivers that sporadic fatal insomnia can 
strike not just the mature, but perhaps people who are just beginning their 
lives. 
 
And with Michael’s story spreading, the next stricken family may at least 
know the harrowing path ahead. 
Kenney: 919-460-2608 or twitter.com/KenneyOnCary 
sporadic FFI, really $$$ 
 
HOW can a genetic disease, one NOT tied to any family member, how can this 
be a genetic disease ? 
easy, they simply change the name to another stupid name of the same damn 
disease.
Gambetti et al must be getting paid very well for all this junk science on 
CJD and human TSE in the USA $$$
Wednesday, November 09, 2011
Case report Sporadic fatal insomnia in a young woman: A diagnostic 
challenge: Case Report TEXAS 
HOW TO TURN A POTENTIAL MAD COW VICTIM IN THE USA, INTO A HAPPENSTANCE OF 
BAD LUCK, A SPONTANEOUS MUTATION FROM NOTHING.
OR WAS IT $$$ 
snip... 
AND THAT MY FRIENDS, IS HOW YOU EXPLAIN SOMETHING AWAY INTO NOTHING. IT'S 
THE USDA ET AL MAD COW WAY $$$ 
how many times have we seen this happen? time and time again. 
sporadic FFI or nvCJD Texas style ??? 
DEEP THROAT TO TSS 2000-2001 (take these old snips of emails with how ever 
many grains of salt you wish. ...tss) 
The most frightening thing I have read all day is the report of Gambetti's 
finding of a new strain of sporadic cjd in young people...Dear God, what in the 
name of all that is holy is that!!! If the US has different strains of 
scrapie.....why????than the UK...then would the same mechanisms that make 
different strains of scrapie here make different strains of BSE...if the 
patterns are different in sheep and mice for scrapie.....could not the BSE be 
different in the cattle, in the mink, in the humans.......I really think the 
slides or tissues and everything from these young people with the new strain of 
sporadic cjd should be put up to be analyzed by many, many experts in 
cjd........bse.....scrapie Scrape the damn slide and put it into 
mice.....wait.....chop up the mouse brain and and spinal cord........put into 
some more mice.....dammit amplify the thing and start the damned 
research.....This is NOT rocket science...we need to use what we know and get 
off our butts and move....the whining about how long everything takes.....well 
it takes a whole lot longer if you whine for a year and then start the 
research!!! Not sure where I read this but it was a recent press release or 
something like that: I thought I would fall out of my chair when I read about 
how there was no worry about infectivity from a histopath slide or tissues 
because they are preserved in formic acid, or formalin or formaldehyde.....for 
God's sake........ Ask any pathologist in the UK what the brain tissues in the 
formalin looks like after a year.......it is a big fat sponge...the agent 
continues to eat the brain ......you can't make slides anymore because the agent 
has never stopped........and the old slides that are stained with Hemolysin and 
Eosin......they get holier and holier and degenerate and continue...what you 
looked at 6 months ago is not there........Gambetti better be photographing 
every damned thing he is looking at..... 
Okay, you need to know. You don't need to pass it on as nothing will come 
of it and there is not a damned thing anyone can do about it. Don't even hint at 
it as it will be denied and laughed at.......... USDA is gonna do as little as 
possible until there is actually a human case in the USA of the nvcjd........if 
you want to move this thing along and shake the earth....then we gotta get the 
victims families to make sure whoever is doing the autopsy is credible, 
trustworthy, and a saint with the courage of Joan of Arc........I am not 
kidding!!!! so, unless we get a human death from EXACTLY the same form with 
EXACTLY the same histopath lesions as seen in the UK nvcjd........forget any 
action........it is ALL gonna be sporadic!!! 
And, if there is a case.......there is gonna be every effort to link it to 
international travel, international food, etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. They will go 
so far as to find out if a sex partner had ever traveled to the UK/europe, etc. 
etc. .... It is gonna be a long, lonely, dangerous twisted journey to the truth. 
They have all the cards, all the money, and are willing to threaten and carry 
out those threats....and this may be their biggest downfall... 
Thanks as always for your help. (Recently had a very startling revelation 
from a rather senior person in government here..........knocked me out of my 
chair........you must keep pushing. If I was a power person....I would be 
demanding that there be a least a million bovine tested as soon as possible and 
agressively seeking this disease. The big players are coming out of the woodwork 
as there is money to be made!!! In short: "FIRE AT WILL"!!! for the very 
dumb....who's "will"! "Will be the burden to bare if there is any coverup!" 
again it was said years ago and it should be taken seriously....BSE will 
NEVER be found in the US! As for the BSE conference call...I think you did a 
great service to freedom of information and making some people feign 
integrity...I find it scary to see that most of the "experts" are employed by 
the federal government or are supported on the "teat" of federal funds. A scary 
picture! I hope there is a confidential panel organized by the new government to 
really investigate this thing. 
You need to watch your back........but keep picking at them.......like a 
buzzard to the bone...you just may get to the truth!!! (You probably have more 
support than you know. Too many people are afraid to show you or let anyone else 
know. I have heard a few things myself... you ask the questions that everyone 
else is too afraid to ask.) 
END...TSS 
snip...see full text ; 
U.S.A. 50 STATE BSE MAD COW CONFERENCE CALL Jan. 9, 2001 
Subject: BSE--U.S. 50 STATE CONFERENCE CALL Jan. 9, 2001 
Date: Tue, 9 Jan 2001 16:49:00 –0800 
From: "Terry S. Singeltary Sr." 
Reply-To: Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy 
######### Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy ######### 
Here we go folks. AS predicted. THIS JUST OUT ! as i predicted, more BSe. 
$$$ 
Tuesday, August 03, 2010 
Variably protease-sensitive prionopathy: A new sporadic disease of the 
prion protein 
Monday, August 9, 2010 
 
Variably protease-sensitive prionopathy: A new sporadic disease of the 
prion protein or just more PRIONBALONEY ? 
snip...see full text ; 
O.K. let's compare some recent cases of this prionpathy in other countries 
besides Gambetti's first 10 recently, that he claims is a spontaneous event, 
from a genetic disorder, that is not genetic, but sporadic, that is related to 
no animal TSE in North America, or the world. ... 
Sunday, August 09, 2009 
CJD...Straight talk with...James Ironside...and...Terry Singeltary... 2009 
Tuesday, August 18, 2009 
BSE-The Untold Story - joe gibbs and singeltary 1999 - 2009 
PPS POLITICAL PRION SCIENCE $$$ 
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease Surveillance in Texas 
Sunday, July 11, 2010 
 
CJD or prion disease 2 CASES McLennan County Texas population 230,213 both 
cases in their 40s 
see the continuing rise of sporadic CJD in Texas here ; 
Saturday, March 5, 2011 
MAD COW ATYPICAL CJD PRION TSE CASES WITH CLASSIFICATIONS PENDING ON THE 
RISE IN NORTH AMERICA 
 
Sunday, August 21, 2011 
The British disease, or a disease gone global, The TSE Prion Disease 
(see video here) 
 
U.S.A. HIDING MAD COW DISEASE VICTIMS AS SPORADIC CJD ? 
(see video at bottom) 
 
Sunday, September 6, 2009 
 
MAD COW USA 1997 
(SEE SECRET VIDEO) 
 
Thursday, August 4, 2011 
Terry Singeltary Sr. on the Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease Public Health Crisis, 
Date aired: 27 Jun 2011 
Monday, December 31, 2012 
Creutzfeldt Jakob Disease and Human TSE Prion Disease in Washington State, 
2006–2011-2012 
Tuesday, December 25, 2012 
CREUTZFELDT JAKOB TSE PRION DISEASE HUMANS END OF YEAR REVIEW DECEMBER 25, 
2012 
 
Friday, November 23, 2012 
 
sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease update As at 5th November 2012 UK, USA, 
AND CANADA 
Sunday, December 2, 2012 
CANADA 19 cases of mad cow disease SCENARIO 4: ‘WE HAD OUR CHANCE AND WE 
BLEW IT’ 
 
Friday, November 23, 2012 
 
sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease update As at 5th November 2012 UK, USA, 
AND CANADA 
Saturday, January 05, 2013 
Immunohistochemical Detection of Disease- Associated Prion Protein in the 
Peripheral Nervous System in Experimental H-Type Bovine Spongiform 
Encephalopathy 
Monday, October 10, 2011 
 
EFSA Journal 2011 The European Response to BSE: A Success Story 
snip... 
 
EFSA and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) 
recently delivered a scientific opinion on any possible epidemiological or 
molecular association between TSEs in animals and humans (EFSA Panel on 
Biological Hazards (BIOHAZ) and ECDC, 2011). This opinion confirmed Classical 
BSE prions as the only TSE agents demonstrated to be zoonotic so far but the 
possibility that a small proportion of human cases so far classified as 
"sporadic" CJD are of zoonotic origin could not be excluded. Moreover, 
transmission experiments to non-human primates suggest that some TSE agents in 
addition to Classical BSE prions in cattle (namely L-type Atypical BSE, 
Classical BSE in sheep, transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME) and chronic 
wasting disease (CWD) agents) might have zoonotic potential. 
snip... 
Thursday, August 12, 2010 
Seven main threats for the future linked to prions 
 
First threat 
The TSE road map defining the evolution of European policy for protection 
against prion diseases is based on a certain numbers of hypotheses some of which 
may turn out to be erroneous. In particular, a form of BSE (called atypical 
Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy), recently identified by systematic testing in 
aged cattle without clinical signs, may be the origin of classical BSE and thus 
potentially constitute a reservoir, which may be impossible to eradicate if a 
sporadic origin is confirmed. 
 
***Also, a link is suspected between atypical BSE and some apparently 
sporadic cases of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans. These atypical BSE cases 
constitute an unforeseen first threat that could sharply modify the European 
approach to prion diseases. 
 
Second threat 
snip... 
IT is of my opinion, that the OIE and the USDA et al, are the soul reason, 
and responsible parties, for Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathy TSE prion 
diseases, including typical and atypical BSE, typical and atypical Scrapie, and 
all strains of CWD, and human TSE there from, spreading around the globe. 
I have lost all confidence of this organization as a regulatory authority 
on animal disease, and consider it nothing more than a National Trading 
Brokerage for all strains of animal TSE, just to satisfy there commodity. AS i 
said before, OIE should hang up there jock strap now, since it appears they will 
buckle every time a country makes some political hay about trade protocol, 
commodities and futures. IF they are not going to be science based, they should 
do everyone a favor and dissolve there organization. 
JUST because of low documented human body count with nvCJD and the long 
incubation periods, the lack of sound science being replaced by political and 
corporate science in relations with the fact that science has now linked some 
sporadic CJD with atypical BSE and atypical scrapie, and the very real threat of 
CWD being zoonosis, I believed the O.I.E. has failed terribly and again, I call 
for this organization to be dissolved. ... 
Tuesday, July 17, 2012 
 
O.I.E. BSE, CWD, SCRAPIE, TSE PRION DISEASE Final Report of the 80th 
General Session, 20 - 25 May 2012 
 
Saturday, October 6, 2012 
TRANSMISSION, DIFFERENTIATION, AND PATHOBIOLOGY OF TRANSMISSIBLE SPONGIFORM 
ENCEPHALOPATHIES 2011 Annual Report 
re-Human Prion Diseases in the United States Posted by flounder on 01 Jan 
2010 at 18:11 GMT 
I kindly disagree with your synopsis for the following reasons ; 
 
Tuesday, November 08, 2011 
 
Can Mortality Data Provide Reliable Indicators for Creutzfeldt-Jakob 
Disease Surveillance? A Study in France from 2000 to 2008 Vol. 37, No. 3-4, 2011 
Original Paper 
 
Conclusions:These findings raise doubt about the possibility of a reliable 
CJD surveillance only based on mortality data. 
Views & Reviews 
Monitoring the occurrence of emerging forms of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in 
the United States 
Ermias D. Belay, MD, Ryan A. Maddox, MPH, Pierluigi Gambetti, MD and 
Lawrence B. Schonberger, MD 
+ Author Affiliations 
From the Division of Viral and Rickettsial Diseases (Drs. Belay and 
Schonberger and R.A. Maddox), National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers 
for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA; and National Prion Disease 
Pathology Surveillance Center (Dr. Gambetti), Division of Neuropathology, 
Institute of Pathology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH. 
 
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Ermias D. Belay, 1600 
Clifton Road, Mailstop A-39, Atlanta, GA 30333. 
26 March 2003 
Terry S. Singeltary, retired (medically) CJD WATCH 
 
I lost my mother to hvCJD (Heidenhain Variant CJD). I would like to comment 
on the CDC's attempts to monitor the occurrence of emerging forms of CJD. 
Asante, Collinge et al [1] have reported that BSE transmission to the 
129-methionine genotype can lead to an alternate phenotype that is 
indistinguishable from type 2 PrPSc, the commonest sporadic CJD. However, CJD 
and all human TSEs are not reportable nationally. CJD and all human TSEs must be 
made reportable in every state and internationally. I hope that the CDC does not 
continue to expect us to still believe that the 85%+ of all CJD cases which are 
sporadic are all spontaneous, without route/source. We have many TSEs in the USA 
in both animal and man. CWD in deer/elk is spreading rapidly and CWD does 
transmit to mink, ferret, cattle, and squirrel monkey by intracerebral 
inoculation. With the known incubation periods in other TSEs, oral transmission 
studies of CWD may take much longer. Every victim/family of CJD/TSEs should be 
asked about route and source of this agent. To prolong this will only spread the 
agent and needlessly expose others. In light of the findings of Asante and 
Collinge et al, there should be drastic measures to safeguard the medical and 
surgical arena from sporadic CJDs and all human TSEs. I only ponder how many 
sporadic CJDs in the USA are type 2 PrPSc? 
Diagnosis and Reporting of Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease Singeltary, Sr et al. 
JAMA.2001; 285: 733-734. Vol. 285 No. 6, February 14, 2001 JAMA
 
JAMA.2001; 285: 733-734. Vol. 285 No. 6, February 14, 2001 JAMA
Diagnosis and Reporting of Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease 
 
To the Editor: In their Research Letter, Dr Gibbons and colleagues1 
reported that the annual US death rate due to Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) 
has been stable since 1985. These estimates, however, are based only on reported 
cases, and do not include misdiagnosed or preclinical cases. It seems to me that 
misdiagnosis alone would drastically change these figures. An unknown number of 
persons with a diagnosis of Alzheimer disease in fact may have CJD, although 
only a small number of these patients receive the postmortem examination 
necessary to make this diagnosis. Furthermore, only a few states have made CJD 
reportable. Human and animal transmissible spongiform encephalopathies should be 
reportable nationwide and internationally. 
Terry S. Singeltary, Sr Bacliff, Tex 
 
1. Gibbons RV, Holman RC, Belay ED, Schonberger LB. Creutzfeldt-Jakob 
disease in the United States: 1979-1998. JAMA. 2000;284:2322-2323. FREE FULL 
TEXT 
2 January 2000 
British Medical Journal 
U.S. Scientist should be concerned with a CJD epidemic in the U.S., as well 
15 November 1999 
British Medical Journal 
vCJD in the USA * BSE in U.S. 
Saturday, January 2, 2010 
Human Prion Diseases in the United States January 1, 2010 ***FINAL*** 
14th ICID International Scientific Exchange Brochure - 
Final Abstract Number: ISE.114 
Session: International Scientific Exchange 
 
Transmissible Spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) animal and human TSE in North 
America update October 2009 
T. Singeltary 
Bacliff, TX, USA 
Background: 
 
An update on atypical BSE and other TSE in North America. Please remember, 
the typical U.K. c-BSE, the atypical l-BSE (BASE), and h-BSE have all been 
documented in North America, along with the typical scrapie's, and atypical 
Nor-98 Scrapie, and to date, 2 different strains of CWD, and also TME. All these 
TSE in different species have been rendered and fed to food producing animals 
for humans and animals in North America (TSE in cats and dogs ?), and that the 
trading of these TSEs via animals and products via the USA and Canada has been 
immense over the years, decades. 
Methods: 
12 years independent research of available data 
Results: 
I propose that the current diagnostic criteria for human TSEs only enhances 
and helps the spreading of human TSE from the continued belief of the UKBSEnvCJD 
only theory in 2009. With all the science to date refuting it, to continue to 
validate this old myth, will only spread this TSE agent through a multitude of 
potential routes and sources i.e. consumption, medical i.e., surgical, blood, 
dental, endoscopy, optical, nutritional supplements, cosmetics etc. 
 
Conclusion: 
I would like to submit a review of past CJD surveillance in the USA, and 
the urgent need to make all human TSE in the USA a reportable disease, in every 
state, of every age group, and to make this mandatory immediately without 
further delay. The ramifications of not doing so will only allow this agent to 
spread further in the medical, dental, surgical arena's. Restricting the 
reporting of CJD and or any human TSE is NOT scientific. Iatrogenic CJD knows NO 
age group, TSE knows no boundaries. I propose as with Aguzzi, Asante, Collinge, 
Caughey, Deslys, Dormont, Gibbs, Gajdusek, Ironside, Manuelidis, Marsh, et al 
and many more, that the world of TSE Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathy is 
far from an exact science, but there is enough proven science to date that this 
myth should be put to rest once and for all, and that we move forward with a new 
classification for human and animal TSE that would properly identify the 
infected species, the source species, and then the route. 
re-Human Prion Diseases in the United States Posted by flounder on 01 Jan 
2010 at 18:11 GMT 
I kindly disagree with your synopsis for the following reasons ; 
Wednesday, May 16, 2012 
 
Alzheimer’s disease and Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathy prion 
disease, Iatrogenic, what if ? 
Proposal ID: 29403 
 
Monday, August 20, 2012 
 
CASE REPORTS CREUTZFELDT-JAKOB DISEASE: AN UNDER-RECOGNIZED CAUSE OF 
DEMENTIA 
Friday, October 05, 2012 
Differential Diagnosis of Jakob-Creutzfeldt Disease 
see the Duke, Pa, Yale, and Mexican study here, showing the misdiagnosis of 
CJD TSE prion disease as Alzheimers ; 
Monday, July 23, 2012 
The National Prion Disease Pathology Surveillance Center July 2012 
TSS 
layperson mom dod 12/14/97 confirmed hvCJD...
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.