The continent is swept by a case of mad-cow dread
Published:
27 November 2000 y., Monday
At first, Arnaud Eboli’s parents blamed his crying spells and screaming arguments on a tough bout of adolescence. Their 17-year-old had always been a normal boy, athletic and smart, fond of hanging out with his friends, practicing martial-arts moves and feasting on fast-food burgers in the suburbs of Paris. But by September 1998 the outbursts had gotten so bad the Ebolis took him to a psychiatrist, hoping therapy would help. It didn’t.
THE CRYING JAGS GOT WORSE. Arnaud grew clumsy and forgetful. “I’m going crazy!” he would howl at his mother, Dominique. “I have mad-cow disease!”
Arnaud’s doctors never guessed the diagnosis could be true—not even after they hospitalized him a year ago for a battery of medical tests. It was his mother who suggested checking for signs of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, the human version of mad cow. The doctors ordered a tonsil biopsy, one of the standard tests these days for CJD. The results confirmed his mother’s worst fears: Arnaud was suffering from the mysterious, incurable brain illness that has frightened Europe and baffled medical researchers for the past 15 years.
Meanwhile, the toll keeps rising in France, where nearly 200 animal cases had been confirmed by last weekend (all of them dairy cattle), and doctors at a Paris hospital were examining a woman they worried might be the country’s fourth human victim. As neighboring countries frantically slapped bans on French beef, demand for the meat plunged at supermarkets and butcher shops across the continent, and farmers braced themselves for profitless times ahead.
Šaltinis:
NEWSWEEK INTERNATIONAL
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The aggressive marketing of cigarettes in the developing world is a key factor in a predicted rise of global cancer rates over the next 20 years
more »
International health experts are hunting for the virus that causes SARS, the flu-like disease that has killed 61 people worldwide
more »
NASA has awarded $19.4 million in funding for 20 new IT research and development programs
more »
Cyber-savvy Estonia, an ex-Soviet republic that has embraced information technology with the velocity of a Baltic Sea storm, will now teach other former communist states to do the same
more »
Russia is on the brink of an AIDS catastrophe, experts say, that could lead to infection rates rarely seen outside sub-Saharan Africa
more »
Skulls Found in Africa and in Europe Challenge Theories of Human Origins
more »
Lithuania Among the World’s Fifty Three Most Developed Countries
more »
A Tibetan graduate student is scheduled to lecture on Tibetan medicine at Harvard University for three months starting from early September
more »
Having a healthy diet, exercising and not being overweight can not only reduce the risk of developing heart disease, but may also protect against Alzheimer's, new research claims
more »
AIDS researchers have announced a possible breakthrough with the discovery of a naturally occurring gene that effectively blocks the disease's progress
more »