What Do You Know About Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease?
Thirty years ago, few people had heard of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD). Today,
it has made the news mostly from its possible link to "mad cow disease." To help make
sense of this puzzling disease, take this quiz, based on information from the CDC
and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS).
1. CJD is a rare, degenerative, fatal brain disorder.
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It was named after two German psychiatrists, Hans Gerhard Creutzfeldt and Alfons Maria
Jakob. CJD is classified as a transmissible spongiform encephalitis (TSE). Spongiform
refers to the description of the infected brain, which becomes filled with so many
holes that it resembles a sponge. There are four forms of CJD: sporadic, which arises
spontaneously; familial, or inherited; infective (very rare), which is passed on by
pituitary growth hormone obtained from cadavers or through contaminated surgical instruments;
and a new variant of CJD (v-CJD), linked to "mad cow disease." Besides CJD, there
are four other TSEs that affect people: kuru, which was found in an isolated tribe
in Papua New Guinea; Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker syndrome (an inherited condition);
fatal familial insomnia (an inherited condition); and sporadic fatal insomnia. These
diseases are very rare. CJD itself occurs only in 1 case per 1 million people. In
the U.S., about 200 cases are reported each year.
2. CJD usually appears in childhood.
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Symptoms of classic CJD typically appear about age 60. Symptoms of new variant CJD
(v-CJD) or of CJD caused by contaminated pituitary growth hormone can first appear
in the early 20s to early 40s. About 9 in 10 people die within a year of symptoms.
3. A failing memory and lack of coordination are early symptoms of classic CJD.
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But these symptoms are the same as for other forms of dementia or illness, which makes
it difficult to diagnose. Other symptoms of CJD include behavioral changes and visual
disturbances. As the disease gets worse, symptoms include mental deterioration, involuntary
movements, blindness, weakness of limbs, and coma.
4. Radiation exposure causes CJD.
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The exact cause is still under investigation, but most researchers believe that CJD
is caused by an abnormal prion, which is a particular kind of protein. Normal prions
are harmless and found in every cell in the body. Abnormal prions take a slightly
different shape and clump together in fibers and plaques. Researchers aren't sure
what role these fibers and plaques play in CJD. In up to 3 in 20 CDJ cases, the abnormal
prion has been inherited.
5. CJD can be passed on through sexual contact.
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CJD is not a sexually transmitted infection, nor is it a contagious one. It cannot
be passed from one person to another. People in the same household as a person with
CJD will not get the disease. The FDA now bans blood donations from people who have
spent an extended time in England or Europe because of concerns that CJD may be passed
through blood products. But there is no documented case in which prions have been
passed through blood products. The only proven manner in which CDJ has been passed
on from an infected person is through contaminated tissue (a cornea, for example)
or contaminated surgical instruments. Normal sterilization procedures such as cooking
or boiling do not destroy prions.
6. A biopsy is the only way to confirm a diagnosis of CJD.
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In a brain biopsy, a neurosurgeon removes a small piece of the brain to be examined.
But a biopsy has several drawbacks. The procedure may be dangerous for the patient,
and the brain sample removed may not be a part that's affected by CJD. Researchers
have developed a safer test, which looks for a particular protein in a patient's cerebrospinal
fluid, but this test is not yet commercially available. An autopsy after death can
also confirm the illness.
7. CJD can be treated with antiviral medicine.
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Currently, there is no treatment for CJD. Medicine is given to relieve symptoms, but
does not change the course of the disease. It is always fatal.
8. CJD is the same disease as bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), also known as
"mad cow disease."
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BSE and CJD are similar but not the same. BSE is a progressive nervous system disorder
in cattle similar to a disease in sheep called scrapie. BSE has been found mainly
in cattle in the United Kingdom, but also in other areas of Europe. It has not been
found in U.S. cattle, according to the USDA. The USDA has banned the importation of
beef from England and Europe to prevent bringing in contaminated meat. Researchers
believe that BSE may be caused by feeding scrapie-infected sheep meat-and-bone meal
to cattle. They also believe that a new form of CJD in people called v-CJD, which
first showed up in England in the early 1990s, is caused by eating beef contaminated
by BSE. (Cooking the meat does not destroy the prions believed to cause the disease.)
The new variant CJD differs from CJD in that people who have it are typically much
younger (30 versus 60) and that symptoms are more psychiatric and sensory than neurological.
9. Childhood vaccines given for other illnesses may pose a risk for contracting the
new variant CJD.
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The FDA and several advisory committees have determined that the risk of contracting
v-CJD through any vaccine (for polio or hepatitis, for example) is remote. The concern
about vaccines surfaced because some vaccines are made using substances derived from
cattle. Some of the bovine components have come from countries where BSE is found.
But there is no evidence in Europe that any vaccines have caused v-CJD.
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