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Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-88022
ABSTRACT
Cruetzfeldt-Jakob disease is a prion protein disease causing a transmissible, subacute, fatal neurodegenerative disease characterized by a spongiform encephalopathy. Though rare, ever since Pruisner described the pathogenesis in 1982, this disease kept the clinicians as well as biologists spellbound, because of its distinct clinical picture and the novel mechanism of transmission. There was a further quantum leap in the interest in the disease with the establishment of its new clinical variant, the so called 'mad cow disease' in the late 1990s and had led to more stringent measures to ensure the quality of cattle-feeds and cattle-derived food products. The sporadic genetic variants, the commonest form of the disease, continue to challenge the genetic scientists. Advances in neuroimaging, cerebrospinal fluid marker proteins and genetic linkage studies now offer excellent diagnostic methods, while advances in therapeutic medicine which use products from cadaveric extracts such as growth hormone for treatment of hypopituitarism, dural grafts for neurosurgical procedures and cornea for transplantation etc. have thrown new challenges in controlling this serious disease.
Subject(s)
Full text: Available Index: IMSEAR (South-East Asia) Main subject: Humans / Creutzfeldt-Jakob Syndrome / Diagnosis, Differential Type of study: Diagnostic study Language: English Year: 2005 Type: Article

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Full text: Available Index: IMSEAR (South-East Asia) Main subject: Humans / Creutzfeldt-Jakob Syndrome / Diagnosis, Differential Type of study: Diagnostic study Language: English Year: 2005 Type: Article