Sheep can pass BSE to their lambs

UK - BSE has been shown to spread naturally between sheep for the first time. It passed from mother to lamb, before or during birth, in an experimentally infected flock. But if the study shows the infection spreads more generally within the flock, that means BSE could still be lurking in Europe’s sheep, possibly posing a greater health risk to people than that from “mad†cows. Scientists found in 1996 that sheep develop a disease similar to BSE if they eat infected cattle tissue. But feeding cattle remains to sheep was banned in Britain in 1988, and in the EU in 1994. All the sheep infected before then should be gone by now.

Source: New Scientist
calendar icon 22 August 2005
clock icon 1 minute read
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