http://news.yahoo.com/h/nm/20010416/sc/feed_chickens_dc.html

[as the FTAA Summit burns and Seattle is reborn by les amis de Quebec, more good
news! Especially since I'm flying to France tomorrow ...]

Monday April 16 7:15 PM ET
U.S. Reviewing Feed Rules Against Mad Cow Disease 

By Lisa Richwine

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. regulators are considering whether feeding chicken
litter to cattle poses any risk of
transmitting the deadly mad cow disease, a top U.S. health official said Monday.

Dr. Stephen Sundlof, director of the FDA's Center for Veterinary Medicine, told
Reuters that practice was one of several
regulators were reviewing as they consider whether to tighten the shield against
the illness. So far, neither mad cow disease nor
its deadly human form have been found in the United States.

Federal rules that took effect in 1997 prohibit feeding cattle or sheep with
protein from animals that are potential carriers of
mad cow or a related illness. Feeding contaminated animal remains is blamed for
spreading the disease to cows throughout
Europe. Experts believe people get the brain-wasting illness by eating
contaminated meat products.

Now, litter containing waste from chickens legally can be processed and fed to
cattle under some circumstances, Sundlof said.

Some have questioned whether chickens that ate material prohibited for cattle
could recycle the banned byproducts back to
cows that ate their litter. The abnormal proteins believed to cause mad cow
disease have proven resilient, and it is unknown
whether a chicken's digestive tract could kill them.

``That's another issue we intend to put out there for examination and
potentially change our position on that ... Just about
everything is open right now,'' Sundlof said in an interview.

In remarks to a public meeting regarding mad cow, also known as bovine
spongiform encephalopathy, Sundlof said regulators
were re-evaluating other practices now exempt from cattle feed bans.

One exemption under review is the feeding of ``plate waste'' to cattle. Plate
waste is food served to people in restaurants that
later is discarded. Some companies reprocess the leftovers into animal feed.

``It's another area we are continuing to look at to determine if it is indeed a
safe practice,'' Sundlof said.

Dr. Paul Brown, medical director for the National Institute for Neurological
Disorders and Strokes, said infected meat from a
T-bone steak, if cut from an infected animal, could pose ``a reasonably remote
possibility'' of being infectious when recycled as
plate waste. The steak might carry spinal cord tissue, which along with brain
parts is considered highly infectious.

Some 100 people in Europe have died from or been diagnosed with the human
version of mad cow, known as variant
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease. 

Copyright © 2001 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.

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