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bike2work
Fri, Apr-18-08, 07:55
http://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSN1636729020080416?feedType=RSS&feedName=healthNews

Sickened pork workers have new nerve disorder

By Julie Steenhuysen

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Eighteen pork plant workers in Minnesota, at least five in Indiana and one in Nebraska have come down with a mysterious neurological condition they appear to have contracted while removing brains from slaughtered pigs, U.S. researchers and health officials said on Wednesday.

They said the illness is a new disorder that causes a range of symptoms, from inflammation of the spinal cord to mild weakness, fatigue, numbness and tingling in the arms and legs.

"As far as we are aware it is a brand new disorder," said Dr. Daniel Lachance of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, who presented his findings at the American Academy of Neurology meeting in Chicago.

Lachance has been following the 18 Minnesota patients, all of whom have evidence of nerve involvement, typically affecting the legs.

He said tests showed patients had damage to the nerves at the root level near the spinal cord, and at the far reaches of their motor nerves, where the nerves connect with muscle.

The first cases of the condition were reported in November of last year at Quality Pork Processors Inc in Austin, Minnesota, where workers had been using compressed air to blow pork brains out of the skull cavity.

Lachance said this process appears to be triggering some sort of inflammatory response. So far, no infectious agent has been found that could explain the illness.

Lachance said it is possible that bits of pig brain stimulated an immune response in the bodies of the workers, causing their immune systems to improperly attack their own nerve tissue.

"It is a very strong association -- the fact that we are talking about harvesting (pig brains) and potentially exposing workers to nervous system tissue and then they are coming down with a neurological syndrome," he said in a telephone interview.

Dr. James Sejvar of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta said it is unlikely the condition could be passed from person to person.

"It doesn't appear this is in any way a foodborne illness," Sejvar told a media briefing. He said the processing technique used appears to be very uncommon.

"We canvassed 25 of the largest pork processors in the United States," Sejvar said. "We have identified only these three plants that use this process."

All three plants have suspended the processing practice as a precaution.

While symptoms range in severity, most of the cases are mild. "Most of these patients have relatively mild weakness on their examinations or in fact no weakness, but have a predominance of sensory symptoms. They could be walking around and not have the appearance of being ill," Lachance said.

He said those who were mildly affected received drugs that address numbness and pain, and those who were more severely affected were treated with drugs that suppress or modulate the immune system.

"No one has completely recovered," Lachance said, adding, "Most have improved to a very modest degree, mainly in terms of their fatigue and sensory symptoms."

KarenJ
Fri, Apr-18-08, 08:59
That's weird. It could be that the preliminary speculation/association is wrong. Maybe the workers who developed the neurological symptoms were using the tools in a way that disposed them to repetitive stress disorders.

Azlocarb
Fri, Apr-18-08, 10:08
I can see how this can happen. If a protein, foreign to the body, is introduced then the immune system will attack it and if the protein is very similar to a native protein then the immune system will also attack the native protein. It looks like blowing pigs brains out of skulls and then breathing the particles is not a good idea, maybe some respirators would be in order.

Bandito
Fri, Apr-18-08, 11:53
My question is did they check the pigs to see if they are sick? Is this some form of mad pig disease? They said they checked for food born illness but I dont know if that is the same thing. After watching the dirty jobs pig episode I havent eaten much pork anyways. Discusting creatures.

esoteric
Fri, Apr-18-08, 12:00
~Bandito

Good point about the sickness. I know there are some diseases that can affect pigs as well, and blowing particles of their brains around doesn't really seem very safe to me.

BUT! Don't be hatin' on the pigs. Be hatin' on the pig farmers. They make them the "disgusting" creatures most people see them as.

deb34
Fri, Apr-18-08, 12:09
It looks like blowing pigs brains out of skulls and then breathing the particles is not a good idea, maybe some respirators would be in order.


if the compressed air vaporizes brain tissue which is then inhaled by the workers, this would be very bad news

I can see how this can happen. If a protein, foreign to the body, is introduced then the immune system will attack it and if the protein is very similar to a native protein then the immune system will also attack the native protein

this is exactly what I was thinking

ElleH
Fri, Apr-18-08, 12:10
That is so gross. Why can't they just cut off the head and dispose of it? Does anybody actually the crap that's made from the head? Even as a child in SC, where hog head cheese and pig ears were common, I wouldn't touch that crap with a 10 foot pole.

bike2work
Fri, Apr-18-08, 12:18
I've been wondering about GMOs (genetically modified organisms) lately. I know that our food supply is completely infiltrated with GMOs. I wonder about these pigs. Maybe it's a new protein or a different proportion of existing proteins.

// WARNING: rant ahead

This is what got me thinking: Celiac disease. Celiac is the inability to produce the digestive enzymes that break down gluten in wheat. Gluten is naturally occurring in wheat, but only in tiny, tiny quantities. After 1000 years of hybrids, farmers have bred enormous amounts of gluten into the wheat that we eat today. The composition of modern wheat is very different from naturally occurring wheat -- we know, for example, because we can sprout wheat kernels that have been preserved in ancient tombs.

So modern wheat is essentially man-made. Celiac Disease is a man-made disease.

What implications does that have for GMOs? A lot of agricultural products are being re-designed for shelf-life, appearance, disease resistance of the crops, etc. If increasing the gluten in wheat has led to Celiac Disease, what other 300 diseases are down the road for people eating GMOs at every meal?

// end of rant

LC FP
Fri, Apr-18-08, 12:57
Celiac Disease is a man-made disease
So is diabetes.

Bandito
Fri, Apr-18-08, 14:22
Esoteric, Good point. I see what you mean. It WAS generally the conditions they were in. I wonder if they would eat their own dung if living free range. I am sure they wouldn't eat that much rancid food. Could make a maggot vomit. If you like pigs, dont watch the "dirty jobs" show with Mike Rowe about the pig farm.....

Anyways, pig tissue is reportedly similar to human tissue. Blowing pig brains around and inhaling them could trigger an immune response.

What worries me is that the pigs have been getting stuff to make them sick like what happened to the cows. There was public service announcments for humans not to eat anything that could have been contaminated with the cows nervouse system. The brain is the heart of the nervous system. Natives of New Guinea which practiced cannibalism got "Kuru" from eating brains of other humans. Kuru is the equivalent disease of mad cow and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. Maybe the pigs somehow have somthing similar.

Simple immune response to inhaled forign protiens or somthing more sinister?

esoteric
Fri, Apr-18-08, 19:24
If you like pigs, dont watch the "dirty jobs" show with Mike Rowe about the pig farm.....

Or maybe I should... ;) I guess I just have a soft spot for all hogs since seeing the undomesticated ones down in Mexico!