SEARCH VEGSOURCE:

 

 

Follow Ups | Post Followup | Back to Discussion Board | VegSource
See spam or
inappropriate posts?
Please let us know.
  




From: TSS (216-119-162-49.ipset44.wt.net)
Subject: CWD-USA-FEDS CRY FOUL ON PRIVATE TESTING $$$
Date: December 20, 2002 at 7:02 am PST

In Reply to: Power Fails for 3 Hours at Plum Island Infectious Disease Lab posted by TSS on December 20, 2002 at 7:00 am:

Private lab reports new cases of fatal deer disease
State disputes results outside eradication zone
By LEE BERGQUIST
lbergquist@journalsentinel.com
Last Updated: Dec. 19, 2002

A private laboratory says it has discovered chronic wasting disease in a deer shot in Marathon County - 100 miles from the closest previous known discoveries - and in two deer that were shot in Grant County during the fall gun season.
20262Chronic Wasting Disease
Private Lab Results
Graphic/Rika Kanaoka
Archived Coverage
Section: Chronic Wasting Disease
Section: Hunting and fishing news

But the findings are being disputed by state officials who raised questions Thursday about the accuracy of the lab's testing procedures.

And officials said they feared the results could unreasonably raise anxiety in parts of the state where the disease had not yet been found.

The new Marathon County finding would thrust the disease into central Wisconsin for the first time. Wisconsin Viral Research Group had previously announced one finding in Grant County. A second finding by the lab in Grant County is new.

Konstance Knox, a founder of Wisconsin Viral Research Lab in Wauwatosa, said she cannot say for certain whether the findings are truly accurate.

"Our job is to report what we find to hunters," said Knox, who thinks the testing technology her company is using is more sensitive than a different technology used in a state testing program for chronic wasting disease.

But a DNR official said the new results are suspect.

"I think this demonstrates some of the reasons why the USDA (Department of Agriculture) has been very cautious about expanding testing to private companies," said Julie Langenberg, a veterinarian at the state Department of Natural Resources.

Wisconsin Viral Research Lab, the private lab, has now reported that three deer showed evidence of the fatal deer disease in 800 samples tested so far.

It was hired by Wildlife Support Services of Hayward, which angered state authorities this fall by marketing test kits directly to hunters who wanted to know whether their deer had the disease.

Now, as the results are coming in, the private lab is reporting cases of the disease in places where Wisconsin's state-run testing program has showed up nothing.

So far, Wisconsin's state-run testing program has uncovered 48 deer with chronic wasting disease out of 3,880 samples that have been analyzed to date. More results are expected today.

All the positive deer in the state's testing program have come from a 411-square-mile region of Dane, Iowa and Sauk counties, except for a separate finding of a positive deer shot outside a Walworth County game farm.
Three rounds of testing

The lab's latest results come from a second and third round of testing on the same tissue samples. That follow-up testing procedure is controversial and is raising a ruckus between the lab and state authorities.

Wisconsin Viral Research Group ran the testing two ways.

The first used the same antibodies employed in a testing procedure approved for a group of government labs that are testing deer. Those tests showed no evidence of the disease.

The second test uses a different antibody, which Knox, who holds a doctorate in experimental pathology from the Medical College of Wisconsin, believes is more sensitive in detecting the abnormal protein that causes chronic wasting disease. Those tests were positive.

"Our approach is that if there is any doubt, you go with the most conservative conclusion," Knox said.

"Our client is the hunter. We want the most sensitive test to detect CWD in the hunters' animals. We know, frankly, they are testing it because it is a risk-management tool for them."

Chronic wasting disease provoked controversy after it was first found west of Madison in February. The disease is part of a family of fatal brain disorders than can affect animals and people. The diseases, which also include mad cow disease and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in people, are believed to be caused by an unusual infectious agent known as a prion.

No known cases of the disease jumping to people have been found. Laboratory research suggests such a jump is theoretically possible, but several researchers say they believe the risk to humans is low.
Government-approved test

When it has come to testing, state authorities have followed the lead of the National Veterinary Services Laboratories, or NVSL.

"NVSL has designated a certain test for a reason, and you are finding out the reason for that," said Barb Powers, director of the veterinary diagnostic lab at Colorado State University.

Another expert said he does not like the test the private Wisconsin lab is using. Terry Spraker, a wildlife pathologist at Colorado State University, said the test has a tendency to report so-called false positives when the lymph - rather than brain - tissue is used.

Wisconsin Viral Research Group has been testing lymph tissue, where the disease has been found to show up faster than the brain in deer.

State officials have sent two letters to Wisconsin Viral Research Group asking the company to turn over samples so results can be tested independently.

Knox said she wants to work with the state, and in fact has asked for tissue samples from positive deer the state has collected for her company's research. She has not gotten them.

"Frankly, we have done nothing wrong, and we are feeling bullied," she said.

A version of this story appeared in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel on Dec. 20, 2002.

http://www.jsonline.com/news/state/dec02/104741.asp

TSS



Follow Ups:



Post a Followup

Name:
E-mail: (optional)
Subject:

Comments:

Optional Link URL:
Link Title:
Optional Image URL: