| Article Index | "Chronic Wasting Disease" | Article Index |
|
CHRONIC WASTING DISEASE
By: "APHIS Veterinary Services" |
|
||||||||
|
Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) of deer and elk that has occurred only in limited areas in the Western United States. First recognized as a clinical syndrome in 1967, it is typified by chronic weight loss leading to death. There is no known relationship between CWD and any other spongiform encephalopathy of animals or people. CWD has occurred in animals at one captive wildlife research facility in northern Colorado and one in southeastern Wyoming. Although cases of CWD have been seen in two zoological parks more than 10 years ago, the affected animals all originated from the research facilities in the above-mentioned areas. Soon after diagnosis of the disease as a TSE, Colorado and Wyoming wildlife management agencies stopped the movement of deer and elk from these facilities. CWD has been confirmed in free-ranging deer and elk in a limited number of counties in northeastern Colorado and southeastern Wyoming. CWD has also been diagnosed in several farmed elk herds in South Dakota, one in Nebraska, and one in Oklahoma. Species that have been affected with CWD are Rocky Mountain elk, mule deer, white-tailed deer, and black-tailed deer. Other ruminant species, including wild ruminants and domestic cattle, sheep, and goats, have been housed in wildlife facilities in direct or indirect contact with CWD-affected deer and elk. No cases of CWD or other TSEís have been detected in these other ruminant species. There is ongoing research to further explore this possibility.
Clinical Signs
Diagnosis
Epidemiology Colorado and Wyoming wildlife management agencies are continuing to invest resources in CWD research efforts. In addition, the Colorado Division of Wildlife is currently developing a management plan for CWD in free-ranging cervids. These agencies are committed to limiting the distribution of the disease to the current localized area and decreasing its occurrence in the deer and elk population. Surveillance Surveillance for CWD in Colorado and Wyoming has been ongoing since 1983, and to date, has confirmed the limits of the endemic areas in those States. An extensive nationwide surveillance effort was started in 1997-98 to better define the geographic distribution of CWD. This surveillance effort is a two-pronged approach consisting of hunter-harvest cervid surveys conducted in Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Michigan, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, South Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming, as well as surveillance throughout the entire country targeting deer and elk exhibiting clinical signs suggestive of CWD. In the free-ranging population, from over 5,000 samples examined, there have been approximately 110 clinically affected deer and elk identified over the last 10 years. The majority of those affected were mule deer. Again, there have been no free-ranging animals found to be positive that did not originate from the endemic areas. |
|
About the author: For more information about CWD, contact:
Michael Miller, Colorado Division of Wildlife
Dr. Tom Thorne, Wyoming Game and Fish Department
Dr. Elizabeth Williams, Department of Veterinary Science The U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) has provided assistance to State officials in diagnosing CWD and in monitoring international and interstate movements of animals to help prevent further spread of CWD. For more information from APHIS, contact:
USDA, APHIS, Veterinary Services Current information on animal diseases and suspected outbreaks is also available on the Internet. Point your Web browser to http://www.aphis.usda.gov to reach the APHIS home page. |
|
|
Email: Contact INFO Telephone: Contact INFO |
Designed & Hosted by: PFALZBOT ©1999-2008 GoatWorld.Com |
|
|
All written, audio, video and graphic material contained within this site, except where otherwise noted, is Copyrighted ©1999-2008. Some content may also be the property of contributors to the site, in which case their material is also protected by applicable copyright laws and this copyright policy. No material may be linked directly to or reproduced in any form without written permission from us. If you would like to reprint something from our site, simply send us an email to request permission to do so. Please refer to our REPRINT criteria. This site is run and operated by Disabled Veterans |
||