Human Mad Cow Case Suspected in Hong Kong

Doctors suspect that a Chinese woman has the human form of mad cow disease in what would be the first case of the lethal brain-wasting disease in Hong Kong, health officials said.

After performing brain scans and tests, doctors believed the unidentified 34-year-old woman has variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, the hospital authority said.

Her symptoms include a progressive neurological disorder, involuntary limb movements and dementia, the hospital authority said. She was admitted to a hospital last month and is in serious condition.

Director of Health Margaret Chan said the government is seeking the views of British experts.

"I must stress that it is still a suspected case at this stage and the experts are still investigating," Chan said.

Neurologist Richard Kay, who is treating the woman, said she probably contracted the disease from eating beef in Britain, but doctors were awaiting a diagnosis from the National Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease Surveillance Center in Edinburgh, Scotland.

Chan stressed that the patient never donated blood, a possible means of spreading the disease during her stay in Hong Kong, and noted that Hong Kong banned beef imports from Britain in 1996.

The disease can only be confirmed by an examination of the brain after death.

According to the hospital authority, the patient lived in Hong Kong from 1992 to 1997, but had lived in Britain and travelled there several times. She returned to Britain in 1997 and came to Hong Kong for treatment early this year.

(Eastday.com 06/11/2001)


In This Series

Steps Taken to Bar Animal Diseases

China May Ban Imports of Cow-Derived Medicines

China’s Milk Safe and Healthy

Customs Tighten Border Checks for Disease

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