Prion Diseases Essay

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    Don’t Get Wasted by Chronic Wasting Disease Can you imagine the impact of a fatal disease on a population? Chronic Wasting Disease, or CWD for short, is a prime example in the whitetail deer herd. CWD is a fatal neurological disease, more specifically known as a type of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs). In deer, this disease causes a characteristic spongy degeneration of the brains of infected animals, resulting in emaciation, excessive drinking and urination, abnormal behavior,

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    Creutzfeldt-Jakob’s Disease affects one person in every million people per year worldwide. In the United States, there are about three-hundred cases per year, making Creutzfeldt-Jakob’s Disease a rare disease. However, once the brain is affected, this degenerative, debilitating disease progresses rapidly. The particles responsible for this rare, fatal disease are called prions. Prions are protienaceous infectious particles formed when normal proteins misfold and clump together, which causes the brain

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    Twenty years after the wind down of the infamous Mad Cow Disease epidemic and thirty years following its first appearance in British cattle, Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy continues to impact thousands. In 1996, it was discovered that bovine spongiform encephalopathy could be transmitted to humans in the form of Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD), most commonly through the ingestion of beef contaminated with BSE. Of the roughly 229 reported cases of vCJD, it’s believed that at least 3 cases

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    this disease or its effects on the human brain. This progressive and debilitating disease maintains many unknowns, and patient outlook is equivalent to lethal injection. Creutzfeldt-Jakob’s Disease (CJD) is a rare, degenerative, invariably fatal brain disorder, derived from transmissible spongiform encephalopathy caused by prions. Prions occur in a normal state, which are harmless proteins found in the body’s cells, and also in an infectious form that causes disease. Harmless forms of prion proteins

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    the genetic disorder of ‘Fatal Familial Insomnia’. As the name does imply, one who is diagnosed with the extremely rare disease is under a death sentence brought on by progressively worsening insomnia. It is not well-known that sleep deprivation can lead to death, but it has been studied on multiple occasions and it has been very heavily linked with to it [8][9]. The disease progresses at a moderately fast rate, starting off simply enough. One may lose the ability to take a short nap, followed

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    sucker”. The creature’s name derives from stories in Latin America of several dead goats with puncture wounds in their necks and all the blood drained from their bodies. Most experts believe the Chupacabra to be a coyote with mange, which is a skin disease that can cause their hair to fall out and the skin to shrivel. In humans, mange is just mildly annoying. But it can be fatal in canines. Chupacabras have been described as resembling a rodent or reptile, with green-gray skin and a disgusting odor

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    House of Commons that a group of scientists had studied a deadly brain disease in cattle known as Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE) with a fatal variant human disorder called Creutzfeldt-Jacob Disease (CJD). Dorrell announced that the scientists had determined the consumption of beef was the likely explanation for Creutzfeldt-Jacob Disease. Scientist also concluded a new claim that both diseases were forms of another disease known as Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathy (TSE) which is described

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    In the nursing field, it is a part of your job to stay abreast with the latest medical research findings and on top of the latest information concerning your profession. The best way to achieve these goals is to do your own research. When you do your research you will have to choose between professional nursing literature and non-professional literature. It is important that you know the characteristics of both and the pros and cons. For my example of professional nursing literature, I used the article

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    The Oprah Winfrey Show broadcasted an episode that talked about the Mad Cow Disease. It was a discussion over the disease that was going on in England and how it may become aware in the United States. Oprah invited a lady named Beryl Rimmer, her granddaughter was hospitalized from the disease. Rimmer stated that her granddaughter caught the disease from beef that was contaminated with the disease. On the show, an expert from the National Cattleman’s Beef Association named Dr. Gary Weber; A worker

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    Aspirin Rey Syndrome

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    Aspirin and Reye Syndrome Reye Syndrome (RS), a disease resulting in encephalopathy, fatty degeneration of the liver, persistent vomiting, combativeness, and potentially death has become a topic of concern for public health officials. RS occurs among children, 18 years and younger, who have experienced a viral disease, such as influenza or varicella, and consumed aspirin or salicylates. Once the onset of RS occurs, the disease has the potential to progress rapidly to a deep coma, and even death

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