Reaction
elsewhere in Asia was muted, with Japan saying there's no reason to restrict
imports. "From simply a public health issue, I put it very, very
low," Cornell University food safety expert Martin Wiedmann said.
Food safety experts played down the risk of mad cow
disease entering the US food supply Wednesday, a day after a government agency
detected the first new case of the disease in the US since 2006.
It was the fourth case discovered in the country,
and no human version of the illness has ever been linked to eating US beef.
"What we know is that 3,000 Americans die every
year from preventable food-borne illnesses that are not linked" to mad cow
disease, said Sarah Klein of the consumer advocacy group Center for Science in
the Public Interest. "Things like E. coli, salmonella – that's where we
should be focusing our attention, outrage and policy."
Two major South Korean retailers suspended sales of
US beef in response. Reaction elsewhere in Asia was muted, with Japan saying
there's no reason to restrict imports.
"From simply a public health issue, I put it
very, very low," Cornell University food safety expert Martin Wiedmann
said of the level of concern about mad cow disease.
Maintaining confidence in exports fuels the nation's
monitoring of the beef supply as much as continuing safety concerns, he said.
Tuesday's news came from that monitoring: Routine
testing of a dead dairy cow from central California showed the animal had
bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or BSE, a disease that gradually eats holes
in the animal's brain.
US health officials were adamant that there was no
risk to the food supply – the cow never was destined for the meat market, and
the World Health Organization says humans can't be infected by drinking milk
from animals with BSE.
The US has been guarding against BSE for years,
since a massive outbreak in Britain that not only decimated that country's
cattle but showed that eating BSE-contaminated meat could trigger a human
version of the disease.
A key part of the safety net: The animal tissues that
can carry the BSE – including the brain and spinal cord – are removed from
cattle before they're processed for food.
Tests are performed on only a small portion of dead
animals brought to the transfer facility in central California.
The cow had died at one of the region's hundreds of
dairies, but hadn't exhibited outward symptoms of the disease: unsteadiness,
incoordination, a drastic change in behavior or low milk production, officials
said.
But when the animal arrived at the facility with a
truckload of other dead cows on April 18, its 30-month-plus age and fresh
corpse made her eligible for USDA testing. Experts say it takes at least that
long for the disease to develop.
"We randomly pick a number of samples
throughout the year, and this just happened to be one that we randomly
sampled," Baker Commodities executive vice president Dennis Luckey said.
"It showed no signs" of disease.
The samples went to the food safety lab at the
University of California, Davis on April 18. By April 19, markers indicated the
cow could have bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), a disease that is fatal
to cows and can cause a deadly human brain disease in people who eat tainted
meat. It was sent to the USDA lab in Iowa for further testing.
On Tuesday, federal agriculture officials announced
the findings: the animal had atypical BSE. That means it didn't get the disease
from eating infected cattle feed, said John Clifford, the Agriculture
Department's chief veterinary officer.
It was "just a random mutation that can happen every
once in a great while in an animal," said Bruce Akey, director of the New
York State Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory at Cornell University. "Random
mutations go on in nature all the time."
In humans, experts say the disease can occur in one
in 1 million people, causing sponge-like holes in the brain. But they say not
enough is known about how and how often the disease strikes cattle.
The disease cannot be transmitted by contact among
cows, and experts say it's unclear whether this rare type of BSE ever has been
transmitted from a cow to a human by eating meat.
The California Department of Public Health and the
state Department of Food and Agriculture quickly worked to assure consumers
that the food supply is safe – and that the cow hadn't been destined for human
consumption. The building where the cow was selected to be tested sends animals
to a rendering plants, which process animal parts for products not going into
the human food chain, such as animal food, soap, chemicals or other household
products.
Among the unknowns about the current case is whether
the animal died of the disease and whether other cattle in its herd are
similarly infected. The name of the dairy where the cow died hasn't been
released, and officials haven't said where the cow was born.
"It's appropriate to be cautious, it's
appropriate to pay attention and it's appropriate to ask questions, but now
let's watch and see what the researcher find out in the next couple of
days," said James Culler, director of the UC Davis dairy food safety
laboratory and an authority on BSE.
The National Cattlemen's Beef Association said in a
statement that "US regulatory controls are effective, and that U.S fresh
beef and beef products from cattle of all es are safe and can be safely traded
due to our interlocking safeguards."
The infected cow was identified through an
Agriculture Department surveillance program that tests about 40,000 cows a year
for the fatal brain disease.
There have been three confirmed cases of BSE in cows
in the United State- in a Canadian-born cow in 2003 in Washington state, in
2005 in Texas and in 2006 in Alabama.
Both the 2005 and 2006 cases were also atypical
varieties of the disease, USDA officials said.
The mad cow cases that plagued England in the early
1990s were caused when livestock routinely were fed protein supplements that
included ground cow spinal columns and brain tissue, which can harbor the
disease.
The Agriculture Department is sharing its lab
results with international animal health officials in Canada and England who
will review the test results, Clifford said. Federal and California officials
will further investigate the case. He said he did not expect the latest
discovery to affect beef exports.
State and federal agriculture officials plan to test
other cows that lived in the same feeding herd as the infected bovine, said
Michael Marsh, chief executive of Western United Dairymen, who was briefed on
the plan. They also plan to test cows born at around the same time the diseased
cow was.
Gosia Wozniacka and Tracie Cone
AP
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