Medical Hypotheses
Volume 61, Issue 4 , Pages 439-443, October 2003

Do cows fed BSE-infected meat and bone meal in the colostrum-producing stage pass on infectious BSE agent to their calves?

  • M Clauss

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorrespondence to: Marcus Clauss, Dr. med. vet. Institute of Animal Pyhsiology, Physiological Chemistry and Animal Nutrition, Veterinary Faculty of the Ludwigs-Maximilians-University of Munich, Veterinaerstr. 13, 80539 Munich, Germany. Phone: +49-89-2180-2556; Fax: +49-89-2180-3208

Veterinary Faculty of the Ludwigs-Maximilians-University of Munich, Veterinaerstr. 13, 80539 Munich, Germany

Received 11 November 2002; accepted 15 April 2003.

Abstract 

Direct ingestion of the infectious BSE agent via meat and bone meal (MBM) is commonly regarded as the main route of infection for cattle. I propose that another plausible route of infection has been overlooked so far, namely the ingestion of MBM by mother animals who susequently pass on the infectious agent in their colostrum and thus infect their offspring. This theory could explain why, although infection is thought to occur at very early stages in life, many BSE animals had not received MBM containing feeds when calves. Literature evidence on intact protein absorption in adult mammals, on the presence of the infectious BSE agent in the blood in the pre-symptomatic stage, and on the incorporation of intact dietary protein into colostrum or milk in humans and pigs, support this hypothesis. This hypothesis does not necessarily mean that colostrum or milk from BSE-positive animals is infectious. Rather, the mother animals in the hypothesis scenario will be themselves infected, but probably not develop the disease due to its long incubation period, thus occurring in statistics as ‘negative’ animals.

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PII: S0306-9877(03)00191-9

doi:10.1016/S0306-9877(03)00191-9

Medical Hypotheses
Volume 61, Issue 4 , Pages 439-443, October 2003