A Transmissible Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease-Like Agent is Prevalent in the Human Population

The etiology of most human dementias is unknown. Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), a relatively uncommon human dementia, is caused by a transmissible viruslike agent. Molecular markers that are specific for the agent have not yet been defined. However, the infectious disease can be transmitted to rod...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 1993-08, Vol.90 (16), p.7724-7728
Hauptverfasser: Manuelidis, Elias E., Manuelidis, Laura
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Manuelidis, Laura
description The etiology of most human dementias is unknown. Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), a relatively uncommon human dementia, is caused by a transmissible viruslike agent. Molecular markers that are specific for the agent have not yet been defined. However, the infectious disease can be transmitted to rodents from both brain and infected buffy coat (blood) samples. To determine whether human CJD infections are more widespread than is apparent from the low incidence of neurological disease, we attempted to transmit CJD from buffy coat samples of 30 healthy volunteers who had no family history of dementing illness. Primary transmissions from 26 of 30 individuals produced CJD-like spongiform changes in the brains of recipient hamsters at 200-500 days postinoculation. This positive evidence of viremia was found for individuals in all age groups (20-30, 40-50, and 61-71 years old), whereas 12 negatively scored brain samples failed to produce similar changes in hamsters observed for >900 days in the same setting. We suggest that a CJD agent endemically infects humans but only infrequently produces an infectious dementia. Disease expression is likely to be influenced by several host factors in combination with viral variants that have altered neurovirulence.
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Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), a relatively uncommon human dementia, is caused by a transmissible viruslike agent. Molecular markers that are specific for the agent have not yet been defined. However, the infectious disease can be transmitted to rodents from both brain and infected buffy coat (blood) samples. To determine whether human CJD infections are more widespread than is apparent from the low incidence of neurological disease, we attempted to transmit CJD from buffy coat samples of 30 healthy volunteers who had no family history of dementing illness. Primary transmissions from 26 of 30 individuals produced CJD-like spongiform changes in the brains of recipient hamsters at 200-500 days postinoculation. This positive evidence of viremia was found for individuals in all age groups (20-30, 40-50, and 61-71 years old), whereas 12 negatively scored brain samples failed to produce similar changes in hamsters observed for &gt;900 days in the same setting. 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subjects Adult
Age groups
Aged
Alzheimers disease
Animals
Biological and medical sciences
Brain - pathology
Creutzfeldt Jakob syndrome
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Syndrome - pathology
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Syndrome - transmission
Cricetinae
Degenerative and inherited degenerative diseases of the nervous system. Leukodystrophies. Prion diseases
Disease
Disease transmission
Female
Hamsters
Histology
Humans
Infections
Leukocytes - physiology
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Nervous system diseases
Neurology
Reference Values
Viremia
Viruses
title A Transmissible Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease-Like Agent is Prevalent in the Human Population
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