| by Fintan Dunne Research by
Kathy McMahon Optimal Wellness Center
Pharmaceutical
interests in the UK are ignoring new scientific research that
shows the insecticide used in the UK government's own warble-fly
campaigns triggered the UK surge of 'Mad Cow' disease.
Latest experiments
by Cambridge University prion specialist, David R. Brown, have
shown that manganese bonds with prions. Other researchers work
shows that prions in the bovine spine --along which insecticides
are applied-- can be damaged by ICI's Phosmet organophosphate(OP)
insecticide -causing the disease.
British scientists
have led the current theory that an infectious prion in bonemeal
fed to cattle causes bovine spongiform disease (BSE).
Infectious
prions are also claimed to cause new variant Creutzfeld-Jakob
Disease (CJD) in humans -from ingesting beef. But the infectious
prion theory serves to obscure a tragic chemical poisoning scandal
behind the majority of BSE cases.
The new work
proves that the prions can bond with manganese in animal feeds
or mineral licks. These manganese prions cause the neurological
degeneration seen in BSE. By a similar process, prions in human
brains are damaged by lice lotions containing organophosphate.
This can result in neurological diseases like CJD and Alzheimers
-later in life.
Many might
be surprised to hear that organophosphates were developed by Nazi
chemists during the course World War Two,
as a chemical weapon nerve agent. One formulation of the insecticide
--Maneb, or Mancozeb-- actually contains manganese in addition
to organophosphate.
The marginalized
research has devestating financial implications for ICI. It would
provide a firm basis for litigants -who could include CJD sufferers,
farmers across the world and families of the many British farmers
who committed suicide during this BSE debacle.
Phosmet organophosphate
has been used at high doses in British warble fly campaigns. In
1996, ICI subsidiary Zeneca sold the phosmet patent to a PO Box
company in Arizona called Gowan -just one week before the UK government
admitted to a link between BSE and nvCJD.
The politically
well-connected British pharmaceuticals group, ICI has the financial
and political clout to block research into any cause other than
the infective model. Indeed no substantive alternative research
has been done. British BSE disease management and research bodies
have taken decisions that do not seem guided by spirited scientific
enquiry. Mysterious prions that jump species is the preferred
research arena.
Scientist
and organic farmer, Mark Purdey gave evidence to the UK BSE inquiry,
that warble fly insecticide was the cause of the disease. The
scientist wheeled out to rubbish Purdy's evidence -Dr. David Ray,
later turned out to have been receiving funding from the insecticide
manufacturer ICI.
A lobby group
that includes Bayer, Monsanto, Novartis, Pfizer, Roche and Schering-Plough
was behind the effort to discredit Purdey. In December 1999, the
same David Ray was appointed to the UK Veterinary Products Committee
(VPC) -a government body that licences animal medicines.
Purdey has
been consistently denied even exploratory funding to extend his
privately supported research. Yet the Purdey/Brown chemical poisoning
model matches with the epidermiological spread of CJD clusters
in humans. It also predicts the incidence of BSE-type diseases
in animals. The accepted infectious model fits neither.
The pharmaceutical
industry is all the more determined to hide the chemical source
of BSE and CJD, because a spotlight on chemicals would expose
the role the insecticides in Alzheimer's --another neurodegenerative
disease--that might lead to claims which would dwarf those from
BSE and CJD litigants. In fact, two leading brain researchers
into CJD and Alzheimers have died in suspicious circumstances
in recent years.
In the United
States, the Environmental Protection Agency is already reviewing
Phosmet's safety. The Centers for Disease Control in the US has
recently conducted experiments on mice that confirm the organophosphate
risk.
Not only is
the EC beef slaughter campaign futile -because BSE disease is
mostly non-infectious, but unless the underlying chemical cause
is addressed, BSE will simply reappear from chemical causes. A
new warble fly campaign is already underway in France using the
organophosphate insecticide.
Of greater
concern is that some lotions for scabies and head lice are now
priming children and adults, for CJD and Alzheimers in later life.
Bonding The
Prion
Cambridge
University prion biochemist, David R. Brown is dismissive of the
science behind the infectious model of BSE. He terms it "a
very limited amount of science by a few assumed- reputable scientists."
He insists there is "no evidence an infectious agent is present
in either meat or milk."
"Simple tests on udder walls of cows --which could easily
detect an infectious prion-- have not been done, why I don't understand."
A number of
researchers have found that organophosphate(OP) in systemic warble
fly insecticide can deform the prion molecule, rendering it ineffective
at buffering free radical effects in the body. Worse still, the
prion is then partial to bond with manganese and become a 'rogue'
prion. A chain reaction whereby rogue prions turn others to rogues
also, can explain the bovine spongiform disease mechanism.
Brown showed
how prion protein bonds benignly with copper, but lethally with
manganese. Even natural variations in relative environmental availability
of manganese versus copper can trigger prion degradation.
The CJD and
BSE symptoms mirror 'manganese madness', an irreversible fatal
neuro-psychiatric degenerative syndrome that plagued manganese
miners in the first half of the last century
Shining a Light on Spongiform
Organic dairy
farmer and peer-review-published independent scientist, Mark Purdey,
says the accepted theory of transmission from BSE-infected cattle
to human CJD -by bonemeal or meat, is dependent on a mutant prion
that has never been isolated under the scientific protocol called
Koch's postulates.
Purdey's insistence
on sticking to the letter of this scientific law earned him the
condemnation of UK officialdom when he first mooted his theory.
But Purdey pointed to CJD clusters downwind of a British Phosmet
production plant to back his case.
He gave evidence
to the UK Government BSE inquiry and was supported by Conservative
MP, Thessa Gorman. His views were discounted, but his subsequent
research and the new Cambridge prion work have confirmed the alternative
theory. Despite this, and the backing of a British peer, he is
denied even exploratory funding.
Speaking from
his rural English Somerset farm yesterday -as plans forge ahead
for the European cattle cull, he asks:
"Why does CJD degeneration in humans begin in the retina,
and why are CJD disease clusters found in high altitude locations?"
The question
is rhetorical, and Purdey has an eye-opening answer. He argues
that the prion molecule has a known natural role as a shock adsorber
of damaging energy from ultraviolet rays and other oxidizing agents.
Once this
prion defence system is rendered ineffective by organophosphates
- for example in human head lice lotions, these oxidizing effects
have an unmediated impact on tissues. Eventually, UV radiation
damages the retina and oxidative stress destroys the brain tissues
of CJD patients. This theory would expect to find higher CJD incidence
in mountain regions -where UV radiation levels are elevated. That
prediction holds true.
A similar
but accelerated mechanism could be driving BSE. ICI's Phosmet
organophosphate warble fly insecticide -applied on the backs of
animals along the spinal column, similarly degrades prions. "Systemic
versions of the insecticide are designed to make the entire cow
carcass toxic to warble fly," explains Purdey. "Unfortunately
it's toxic to prions too -especially those prions located just
millimeters from the point of application."
The damaged
prions are then ready to react with manganese in animal feed,
or manganese sprayed on land or in mineral licks -to become the
driving force of BSE neurodegeneration. Purdey says manganese-tipped
prions set off lethal chain reactions that neurologically burn
through the animal.
Chickens notoriously
excrete most of the supplements fed to them -including manganese.
And their manganese-rich excreta have been blended into cattle
feed in the UK. Natural variations in the relative environmental
availability of copper and manganese can also spur prion degeneration
says Purdey.
From this
research, any prudent person would conclude there is a significant
risk attaching to the use of organophosphate in humans. Preparations
for head lice and scabies are known to be overused in practice
and might be priming users for CJ disease.
Purdey believes
his bias for field work is the key to his success. He bemoans
the "reductionism" of much lab-centered science. "I
have traveled the world to investigate known clusters of spongiform
disease -something mainstream researchers don't seem remotely
interested in doing."
Since first
postulating an environmental -rather than infectious- theory of
spongiform diseases, Purdey has built evidence from around the
world that explains and predicts the incidence in humans and animals:
a cluster of CJD in Slovakia, Eastern Europe -around a manganese
plant; Rocky Mountain deer with Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD),
who were found to be eating pine needles rich in manganese; the
futile slaughter of sheep in Cyprus -only for BSE to reemerge
within years.
"The
reappearance of BSE in Cyprus obviously points to an environmental
cause," says Purdey, who is sanguine when reflecting on the
condemnation of him by mainstream scientists.
"I suppose
they have mortgages and kids who need to go to university,"
he muses. "Privately, some were agreeing with me, but then
they would denounce me publicly. It was quite strange really."
The Money Trail
Critical scientists
like Purdey are unlikely to prevail. The pharmaceutical industry
holds most research purse strings, and would hardly energetically
explore an avenue of research that could expose them to litigation
for causing BSE. The official theory is lavishly funded, alternative
theories rarely, if at all.
There are
more explosive implications to his -and other's latest research.
Purdey says similar organophosphate-induced protein deformation
could also underlie Alzheimer's disease. If that were true, the
litigation fallout would destroy some pharmaceutical giants, and
a lot of very influential noses would be out of joint.
Disturbingly,
Purdey and other brain researchers seem to have had an undue share
of unfortunate accidents. Purdey's house was burned down and his
lawyer who was working with him on Mad Cow Disease was driven
off the road by another vehicle and subsequently died. The veterinarian
on the case also died in a car crash -locally reported as: 'Mystery
Vet Death Riddle.'
Dr. C. Bruton,
a CJD specialist --who had just produced a paper on a new strain
of CJD-- was killed in a car crash before his work was announced
to the public. Purdey speculates that Bruton might have known
more than what was revealed in his last scientific paper.
In 1996, leading
Alzheimer's researcher Tsunao Saitoh, 46 and his 13 -year-old
daughter were killed in La Jolla, California, in what a Reuters
report described as a "very professionally done" shooting.
What Alzheimer's
Disease, Mad Cow Disease, and CJ Disease have in common, is abnormal
brain proteins and a putative link to organophosphates. Even Gulf
War syndrome among returning veterans has been attributed, in
part to the insecticide. But the sidelined scientists' suspicions
are still largely ignored.
In their favour
at the moment, is a growing unease on the part of the public.
As BSE forges on and Governments panic, Science may be out to
lunch on BSE, compromised by bovine spongythinking myopathy.
Do Not Use
Systemic Organophosphate Insecticides
Do NOT treat
children with OP head lice products - they may cause CJD and Alzheimer's
Do NOT treat
your pets with OP anti-flea products
Do NOT treat
cattle or animals with OP products - they may cause BSE
Do NOT give
manganese to cattle previously dosed with a systemic OP
The relative
availability of the metals copper and manganese in you local environment
is a major factor in BSE & CJD
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