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CANADA Officials confirm another case of mad cow disease

Monday, April 17, 2006


It is the fifth case in Canada in nearly three years.
TORONTO (AP) -- Canada confirmed a case of mad cow disease on Sunday at a farm in British Columbia -- the country's fifth case since May 2003, when the United States closed its border to Canadian beef.
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency announced Thursday it had a suspected case of bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or BSE.
In humans, meat products contaminated with BSE have been linked to more than 150 deaths, mostly in Britain, from variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease, a rare and fatal nerve disease.
The 6-year-old cow was identified on a Fraser Valley farm through the national BSE surveillance program. It is the fifth case in Canada since May 2003, when the U.S. border was closed to Canadian beef after the sick cows were detected in Canada.
In a written statement, the inspection agency said the case would have no bearing on the safety of Canadian beef, because no part of the animal entered the human food or animal feed systems.
Inspectors have tested roughly 100,000 animals since Canada's first case was detected in Alberta.
and have said they expect to find isolated cases of the disease.
It is second animal born after a 1997 ban on cattle feed to test positive for mad cow.
A cow from an Alberta farm tested positive for the disease in January.
The cow's age raises questions about the effectiveness of the ban, because the disease is believed to spread only when cattle eat feed containing certain tissues from infected cattle. Cattle protein was commonly added to cattle feed to speed growth until Canada -- and the United States -- banned the practice in 1997.
It could indicate a lack of compliance with the ban by Canadian feed plants or farmers.