Thursday, October 30, 2025

TEXAS PARKS & WILDLIFE: 50 CWD CASES AT SITE OF INITIAL POSITIVE IN WASHINGTON CO., BUT NO NEW CASES IN WILD

 TEXAS PARKS & WILDLIFE: 50 CWD CASES AT SITE OF INITIAL POSITIVE IN WASHINGTON CO., BUT NO NEW CASES IN WILD


Josh Blaschke

October 29, 2025

Fifty cases of Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) were reported after a deer herd depopulation operation this summer at the location of Washington County’s first recorded case, but state officials say those cases were all contained to the original site.

Texas Parks and Wildlife District 9 Leader Bobby Eichler (right), with Texas Game Warden Vinicius Mathias, provides an update to Washington County Commissioners on Tuesday about the current state of Chronic Wasting Disease in the county. Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD) District 9 Leader Bobby Eichler informed Washington County Commissioners on Tuesday that 158 adult deer and 63 fawns were euthanized as part of the operation. The depopulation occurred in the overnight hours between August 5th and 6th at the deer-breeding facility north of Brenham, where the county’s first case of CWD was reported in early 2023 in a doe that was born in the facility.

Eichler said the 50 positive cases represented roughly a third of the facility’s adult herd – the fawns, none older than 5 months of age, were not tested – and were spread across all age groups and both sexes. He said at the time of the depopulation, 72 deer were missing from the reported herd inventory and were presumed dead.

According to Eichler, since the initial positive was detected in 2023, none of the deer that have since tested positive were found in the wild; all were at the site of the first case.

CWD is a degenerative prion disease that erodes the neurological functions of deer. Victims experience symptoms like weight loss, stumbling, salivating and an overall appearance of “wasting” away. It is ultimately fatal, and there is no treatment or vaccine.

The test samples were submitted to the National Veterinary Services Laboratories in Ames, Iowa, and the results were returned on September 30th. Eichler said after the first positive case from 2023, the herd was quarantined, and additional live testing resulted in no new detections, though he noted that post-mortem testing is typically more effective. Captive deer-breeding facilities undergo annual CWD testing requirements to ensure deer are safe to be released to other breeders or ranchers.

Eichler said as part of an agreement reached this summer between the facility owner, the TPWD and the Texas Animal Health Commission, the owner voluntarily accepted USDA indemnity funds of an undisclosed amount. The herd was depopulated as a condition of that agreement, and the carcasses were buried deep underground on-site.

When asked if the affected deer-breeding facility would be able to re-open, TPWD Regional Wildlife Health Specialist Megan Hahn answered that most USDA herd plans require a quarantine period of at least 60 months before discussion can begin on re-introducing CWD-susceptible species. She said those plans also involve high-intensity cleaning and disinfecting of related equipment, troughs and fencing, while non-metallic items can be burned.

Across the state, Hahn said there have been roughly 1,100 positive CWD detections, with a little over 140 of those being considered free-ranging. Most of the cases are out of the Panhandle and West Texas. Hahn said testing efforts will remain constant as the state works to understand where the disease is located, as well as its prevalence and spread.

Eichler encouraged the continued use of the check station located in the parking lot east of the constables’ offices for dropping off samples to be tested.

Also at Tuesday’s meeting, the court moved unanimously after an executive session to appoint Travis Semora to the office of Precinct 2 Justice of the Peace, filling the vacancy created after Judge Douglas Cone announced he would not seek re-election to the post next year and would instead run for county judge. Semora has decades of experience in law enforcement, security operations and safety consulting, including time served with the Houston Police Department and Austin County Sheriff’s Office.

https://kwhi.com/2025/10/29/texas-parks-wildlife-50-cwd-cases-at-site-of-initial-positive-in-washington-co-but-no-new-cases-in-wild/

Eichler updates county on Chronic Wasting Disease

By Jason May jason@southtexasnews.com Oct 29, 2025

Snip…

“After receiving confirmation that the sample was CWD positive, the herd was quarantined. The facility conducted additional antemortem or live testing with no additional detections,” he said. “Ultimately, the facility owner voluntarily accepted USDA indemnity funds, and the herd was depopulated as a condition of that agreement.”

He detailed how the operation was carried out.

“Texas Parks and Wildlife staff determined that using chemical immobilization drugs and a captive penetrating bolt gun were the two most humane methods to collect the deer and the safest means for personnel involved,” Eichler said. “A bolt gun is a simple device that uses a .22 blank cartridge to drive a bolt into the skull. It is not an actual firearm and does not fire a projectile.”

The carcasses were buried on site as agreed upon with the facility, the Texas Animal Health Commission and the USDA.

Eichler noted that approximately 30 percent of the herd tested positive for CWD.

“All 158 adult deer were sampled. The only deer not tested were fawns under five months of age,” he said. “Samples were sent directly to the National Veterinary Services Laboratory, a USDA facility in Ames, Iowa. Results were returned to Texas Parks and Wildlife on Sept. 30. Of the 158 samples, 50 were positive for CWD, representing 31 percent of the herd. Positive deer were found across all age groups and both sexes.”

Eichler said testing for CWD continues statewide.

https://kdhnews.com/news/texas/eichler-updates-county-on-chronic-wasting-disease/article_ac83accb-3002-561c-adc2-bb34e2e04b87.html

Trucking CWD TSE Prion

Chronic Wasting Disease CWD TSE Prion of Cervid

“CWD spreads among wild populations at a relatively slow rate, limited by the natural home range and dispersed nature of wild animals.”

NOW HOLD YOUR HORSES, Chronic Wasting Disease CWD of Cervid can spread rather swiftly, traveling around 50 MPH, from the back of truck and trailer, and Here in Texas, we call it ‘Trucking CWD’…

Preventive Veterinary Medicine Volume 234, January 2025, 106385

Use of biosecurity practices to prevent chronic wasting disease in Minnesota cervid herds

Vehicles or trailers that entered the farm were used to transport other live cervids, cervid carcasses, or cervid body parts in past 3 years in 64.3 % (95 % CI 46.3–82.3) of larger elk/reindeer herds compared to 13.6 % (95 % CI 4.7–22.4) of smaller deer herds.

Snip…

Identifying the exact pathway of initial CWD transmission to cervid herds is often not possible, in part due to many potential pathways of transmission for the infection, including both direct and indirect contact with infected farmed or wild cervids (Kincheloe et al., 2021). That study identified that transmissions from infected farmed cervids may occur from direct contact with the movement of cervids from one herd to another and from indirect contact with the sharing of equipment, vehicles, clothing, reproductive equipment, and potentially through semen or embryos.

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S016758772400271X

“Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) is a fatal neurological disease and can devastate deer populations by silently spreading through direct animal contact and contaminated environments. Without close monitoring, illegal movement of captive deer increases the risk of introducing CWD to areas it is not known to exist, potentially leading to widespread outbreaks which will impact more than just the health of Texas deer.”

https://tpwd.texas.gov/newsmedia/releases/?req=20250227b

Texas Chronic Wasting Disease CWD TSE Prion Dashboard Update August 2025

SEE NEW DASHBOARD FOR CWD POSITIVES!

https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/8f6c27330c444a19b4b57beb7ffabb8b/page/Dashboard#data_s=id%3AdataSource_3-1966d773e34-layer-10%3A29

Texas CWD total by calendar years

https://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/2024/12/texas-cwd-tse-prion-positive-samples-by.html

https://tpwd.texas.gov/huntwild/wild/diseases/cwd/positive-cases/listing-cwd-cases-texas.phtml#texasCWD

Counties where CWD Exposed Deer were Released

https://tpwd.texas.gov/documents/257/CWD-Trace-OutReleaseSites.pdf

Number of CWD Exposed Deer Released by County

https://tpwd.texas.gov/documents/258/CWD-Trace-OutReleaseSites-NbrDeer.pdf

CWD Status Captive Herds

https://www.aphis.usda.gov/sites/default/files/status-of-captive-herds.pdf

Texas Game Wardens Near Conclusion of ‘Ghost Deer’ Case with 24 Suspects, 1,400 Charges Filed Statewide

Aug. 14, 2025

Media Contact: TPWD News, Business Hours, 512-389-8030

AUSTIN – The Texas Game Warden investigation known as "Ghost Deer" has reached a possible conclusion after two additional suspects turned themselves in on felony charges. This brings the total number of individuals implicated in the case to 24, with approximately 1,400 charges filed across 11 Texas counties.

Ken Schlaudt, 64, of San Antonio, the owner of four deer breeding facilities and one release site, along with facility manager Bill Bowers, 55, of San Angelo, surrendered to the Travis County District Attorney’s Office on charges of felony tampering with a governmental record. Both men allegedly entered false information into the Texas Wildlife Information Management System (TWIMS) to facilitate illegal smuggling of white-tailed breeder deer. They also face more than 100 misdemeanor charges related to unlawful breeder deer activities in Tom Green County.

The "Ghost Deer" investigation has uncovered widespread, coordinated deer breeding violations including, but not limited to: smuggling captive breeder deer and free-range whitetail deer between breeder facilities and ranches, Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) testing violations, license violations and misdemeanor and felony drug charges relating to the possession and mishandling of prescribed sedation drugs classified as controlled substances.

The suspects charged in the case include:

Evan Bircher, 59, San Antonio Vernon Carr, 55, Corpus Christi Jarrod Croaker, 47, Corpus Christi Terry Edwards, 54, Angleton Joshua Jurecek, 41, Alice Justin Leinneweber, 36, Orange Grove James Mann, 53, Odem Gage McKinzie, 28, Normanna Herbert “Tim” McKinzie, 47, Normanna Eric Olivares, 47, Corpus Christi Bruce Pipkin, 57, Beaumont Dustin Reynolds, 38, Robstown Kevin Soto, 55, Hockley Jared Utter, 52, Pipe Creek Reed Vollmering, 32, Orange Grove Clint West, 56, Beaumont James Whaley, 49, Sevierville, Tenn. Ryder Whitstine, 19, Rockport Ryker Whitstine, 21, Rockport Claude Wilhelm, 52, Orange Cases are pending adjudication in Bandera, Bee, Brazoria, Duval, Edwards, Jim Wells, Live Oak, Montgomery, Tom Green, Travis and Webb counties.

The investigation began in March 2024 when game wardens discovered the first violations during a traffic stop.

https://tpwd.texas.gov/newsmedia/releases/?req=20250206a

That incident led wardens to the much larger network of violations,

https://tpwd.texas.gov/newsmedia/releases/?req=20250227b

resulting in one of the largest deer smuggling operations in Texas history.

About Texas Game Wardens

Texas Game Wardens, within the Law Enforcement Division of Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, are responsible for enforcing laws related to the conservation and management of natural resources and public safety through community-based law enforcement. Their mission is to provide hunting, fishing and outdoor recreation opportunities for the use and enjoyment of present and future generations. Additionally, they play a crucial role in search and rescue operations during natural disasters, exemplifying their commitment to protecting both the environment and the people of Texas.

If you witness a fishing, wildlife or boating violation in progress, please call 1-800-792-GAME(4263) immediately and report it to Operation Game Thief (OGT), Texas’ Wildlife Crime-Stoppers Program. You can also text your tip by sending the keyword TXOGT plus your tip to 847411 or through the Texas OGT App, available for iOS and Android devices. Dispatchers are available 24/7.

https://tpwd.texas.gov/newsmedia/releases/?req=20250814c

Texas Chronic Wasting Disease CWD TSE Prion Dashboard Update August 2025

https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/8f6c27330c444a19b4b57beb7ffabb8b/page/Dashboard#data_s=id%3AdataSource_3-1966d773e34-layer-10%3A29

WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2025

Texas CWD TSE Prion Cases Rises to 1099 Confirmed Cases To Date

Entries CWD Positives    

Positive Number    CWD Positive Confirmation Date    Free Range Captive    County    Source    Species    Sex    Age

1099    5/5/25    Breeder Deer    Gillespie    Facility #14    White-tailed Deer    M    4.9

1098    4/24/25    Breeder Deer    Zavala    Facility #23    White-tailed Deer    F    7.8

1097    4/24/25    Breeder Deer    Zavala    Facility #23    White-tailed Deer    F    7.8

1096    4/17/25    Breeder Release Site    Zavala    N/A    White-tailed Deer    M    10.5

1095    4/3/25    Breeder Deer    Kimble    Facility #26    White-tailed Deer    F    2.5

1094    4/3/25    Breeder Deer    Kimble    Facility #26    White-tailed Deer    F    6.5

1093    4/3/25    Breeder Deer    Kimble    Facility #26    White-tailed Deer    F    3.5

1092    4/3/25    Breeder Deer    Frio    Facility #24    White-tailed Deer    F    1.7

1091    4/3/25    Breeder Deer    Frio    Facility #24    White-tailed Deer    F    1.7

1090    4/3/25    Breeder Deer    Frio    Facility #24    White-tailed Deer    F    3.7

1089    4/3/25    Breeder Deer    Frio    Facility #24    White-tailed Deer    F    5.7

1088    4/3/25    Breeder Deer    Frio    Facility #24    White-tailed Deer    F    5.7

1087    4/3/25    Breeder Deer    Frio    Facility #24    White-tailed Deer    F    7.7

1086    4/3/25    Breeder Deer    Frio    Facility #24    White-tailed Deer    F    3.7

1085    4/3/25    Breeder Deer    Frio    Facility #24    White-tailed Deer    F    3.7

1084    3/19/25    Free Range    El Paso    N/A    Mule Deer    M    6.5

1083    3/14/25    Breeder Deer    Frio    Facility #24    White-tailed Deer    M    1.7

1082    2/27/25    Breeder Deer    Kaufman    Facility #36    White-tailed Deer    F    0.5

1081    2/27/25    Breeder Deer    Kaufman    Facility #36    White-tailed Deer    M    1.5

1080    2/21/25    Breeder Deer    Gillespie    Facility #15    White-tailed Deer    M    2.5

1079    2/19/25    Breeder Deer    Frio    Facility #24    White-tailed Deer    M    1.4

1078    2/13/25    Breeder Release Site    Medina    Facility #3    Elk    F    4

1077    1/14/25    Breeder Deer    Frio    Facility #24    White-tailed Deer    F    2.5

1076    1/14/25    Breeder Deer    Frio    Facility #24    White-tailed Deer    M    1.5

1075    1/14/25    Breeder Deer    Frio    Facility #24    White-tailed Deer    M    1.5

1074    1/24/25    Breeder Deer    Zavala    Facility #23    White-tailed Deer    F    1.5

1073    1/24/25    Breeder Deer    Zavala    Facility #23    White-tailed Deer    F    4.5

1072    1/24/25    Breeder Deer    Zavala    Facility #23    White-tailed Deer    M    2.5

1071    1/24/25    Breeder Deer    Zavala    Facility #23    White-tailed Deer    M    2.5

1070    1/24/25    Breeder Deer    Zavala    Facility #23    White-tailed Deer    M    3.5

1069    2/4/25    Breeder Release Site    Brown    N/A    White-tailed Deer    F    2.6

1068    1/23/25    Breeder Release Site    Sutton    N/A    White-tailed Deer    M    6.5

1067    1/23/25    Breeder Release Site    Medina    Facility #3    White-tailed Deer    M    5.

1066    1/24/25    Breeder Release Site    Hunt    N/A    White-tailed Deer    M    2.5

1065    1/14/25    Breeder Release Site    Zavala    N/A    White-tailed Deer    M    5.5

1064    1/14/25    Breeder Release Site    Zavala    N/A    White-tailed Deer    M    5.5

1063    1/16/25    Free Range    Hudspeth    N/A    Mule Deer    M    8.5

1062    1/7/25    Breeder Deer    Real    Facility #29    White-tailed Deer    F    3.4

1061    12/26/24    Breeder Release Site    Brown    N/A    White-tailed Deer    F    3.5

Snip…see full list of CWD Positives;

https://tpwd.texas.gov/huntwild/wild/diseases/cwd/positive-cases/listing-cwd-cases-texas.phtml

Texas Poachers Busted in Historic Kansas Sting After Slaughter of 119 Monster Bucks

An outlaw ring poached giant bucks and allegedly stole trophy semen in one of the most astounding illegal hunting cases in U.S. history.

Chris Bennett

By Chris Bennett

Updated September 23, 2025 06:57 AM

LEAD BUTLER BROTHERS.jpg James, left, and Marlin Butler were at the helm of one of the most consequential poaching rings on U.S. record—16,600” of illegal antlers.(Photos courtesy of B.J. Thurman) Hack off a head of magnificent antlers. Slice away a scrotum of trophy semen. Roll the carcass onto its snowy belly to conceal the crime. High-five. Make bank. Fly away in a jet. Do it again.

One of the most astounding illegal hunting cases in U.S. history unfolded in the pastureland and crop rows of southwest Kansas with the poaching of at least 119 giant bucks, representing a minimum of 16,600” of horn, a mind-boggling quarter-mile stretch.

Who was killing the monsters of Kansas? Who triggered one of the wildest conservation busts on record?

“The sickest bunch of outlaws I’ve ever come across,” says retired game warden Tracy Galvin. “They came up here out of Texas and Louisiana, and raped our deer country.”

Sugar and Vinegar

In the rolling red gypsum hills and dagger-leafed yucca of Comanche County, a stone’s throw from the staggered flow of the Cimmaron River, with the nearest backup officer a lonely two-and-a-half hours distant, Galvin knelt beside a barrel-chested, headless deer. No shell casing, no tire tracks, and no physical evidence beyond the decapitated beast. Just Galvin and a mutilated buck in the back of beyond.

It was November 2003, and although illegal kills were part-and-parcel of the 25-year veteran’s world, the dead whitetail pricked his intuition. Random poacher? Hell no.

UHAUL BEGINS TO FILL WITH ANTLERS.jpg Kansas game wardens needed a U-Haul to carry home a freakish trove of antlers seized in Texas.(Photo courtesy of B.J. Thurman)

“There were several bucks killed in that time frame that struck me as connected,” he recalls. “But sometimes you just watch and wait for a tip, leak, or mistake.”

Comanche County, part of Kansas’ renowned Unit 16 hunting section, was loaded with groceries and cover for whitetails: Forested drainage, arid buttes contrasted by an abundance of irrigated crops, and 790 square miles of big spaces dotted by less than 2,000 people. The county also housed plenty of magnets for outlaws in the form of the biggest bucks in the Jayhawk universe. However, snagging a permit in cream-of-the-crop Unit 16 was highly competitive, especially for non-resident hunters.

The following year, in 2004, at his home office in the county seat of Coldwater, during the opening of archery season, Galvin fielded a phone call from a local farmer describing odd activity the night before: rifle shots and headlights.

Clad in green Wrangler jeans and gray shirt, with a .45 caliber Glock 21 on his hip, Galvin climbed into a full-size, four-door Dodge pickup and rumbled up US 183, with game warden B.J. Thurman riding shotgun. Responsible for a massive four-county expanse (Grant, Morton, Stanton, and Stevens) due west, plain-talking Thurman fit the classic mold of lawman. As a duo, Galvin and Thurman had remarkable presence—Galvin carrying a 300 lb. frame and Thurman solidly stacked over 6’1”, decked in boots and cowboy hat.

GALVIN AND THURMAN.jpg Tracy Galvin, left, pictured with a cougar taken by a landowner in 2007, alongside plain-talking B.J. Thurman, right.(Photo by KDWP)

Arriving at the property location described in the farmer’s call-in, Galvin and Thurman eyeballed seven men, rifles in plain sight, gathered outside a temporary hunting camp.

Doling out sugar, rather than vinegar, Galvin and Thurman offered handshakes. The small group of men, most in their 30s and wearing tell-all grins, introduced themselves as humble visitors from Shelby County, Texas—600 miles southeast of Coldwater. Outwardly, they presented as a respectable hunting crew clad in camo holding non-resident archery permits, i.e., honorable outdoorsmen. In reality, outlaws.

The leader? James Bobby Butler, 35, of Center, Texas. “He was really friendly. Too friendly,” Galvin remembers. “He was super talkative. Too talkative. My radar was going off the charts. The more he spoke, the more suspicious I got.”

“We didn’t know it right then, but Butler had numerous criminal charges and convictions ranging from drugs to money laundering to gambling to wildlife offenses,” Thurman notes.

Soaking in the campsite’s incongruities, Galvin asked if the party knew anything about gunshots the previous evening.

Yes, that was us. We shot a wild pig last night. Nasty critters. Tear up jack. Thank you for asking. “Sure as s***, they showed us a fresh hog they’d killed,” Thurman describes, his words flavored by a southwest drawl. “No. No. No. We weren’t buying it. We were close to the well-known Hashknife Ranch and some seriously big deer, and these guys were roaming all over Comanche County and surrounding counties. We knew something bad was going on because the entire setup felt crooked as hell.”

POACHER TREE.jpg B.J. Thurman’s conspiracy tree used in Operation Cimarron to identify and link suspects.(Photo courtesy of B.J. Thurman)

Sincerely. Galvin and Thurman had just rubbed the edges of the most consequential poaching slaughter on Kansas record and one of the most significant busts in U.S. history.

“Burying and burning antlers, sneaking deer on airplanes, cutting off balls, moving drugs, and so much more,” Galvin exclaims. “All in the name of greed.”

Poaching Incorporated

Over the next two years, Galvin noted a consistent location shift by the Texas hunters. “They moved around in different spots of our area, and every now and then, a local would say something to us about strange things going on. But we had no probable cause—yet.”

KANSAS DEER UNITS.jpg Obtaining a permit in premium Unit 16 was highly competitive, especially for non-resident hunters.(Photo by KDWP)

However, in roughly 2005, Butler and company dropped an anchor 5 miles southwest of Coldwater, establishing a hunting post on eight purchased acres composed of three trailers, several sheds, and an elevated bin, all fronted by a pole flying the Texas flag: Camp Lone Star.

Visiting hunters to Camp Lone Star flew in by private jet to Comanche County Airport, hopped in a Chevy Blazer parked permanently at the airstrip, and rumbled to the makeshift hunting base—reversing the process for the trip home. Butler paid big coin for farmland and pastureland leases, keeping Kansas landowners tickled pink. Yet, despite the gleam of cash on the barrelhead, people knew.

“Stories were everywhere,” Galvin notes. “We didn’t know specifically what James Butler was up to or where he was connected, but we sure as hell were digging.”

CAMP LONE STAR 1.jpg Camp Lone Star, aka Poaching Incorporated.(Photo courtesy of B.J. Thurman)

Poaching Incorporated was in session. Camp Lone Star turned Comanche County and its monster bucks into Grand Central Station for out-of-state hunters. “It’s important to realize this was all happening in Unit 16, where there was a limited draw on deer permits,” Thurman details. “I’m talking very, very competitive to get a tag, but Butler meanwhile was flying guys in steady on a King Air jet. He had something bigger than the Titanic going down behind the scenes.”

During the opening of muzzleloading season in October 2005, Galvin and Thurman, along with a host of other conservation officers, worked the Oklahoma-Kansas line, running a dragnet to snag Okie outlaws sneaking onto Jayhawk land. Following the border vigil, returning to Coldwater, Galvin suggested a slight detour: a courtesy stop at Camp Lone Star.

Pulling onto the property, the game wardens immediately eyeballed in-the-act violations. Two men, toting a bloodied cooler, were on the edge of an adjacent field, and in the main yard, a buck dangled on a skinning rack.

Officer Brian Hanzlik, with K-9 partner, Alley, at his side, snapped into action. “Brian was that guy,” Galvin says. “Always ready and he could handle anything. His dog caught the scent and went right into the field where two of the guys had just dumped a doe.”

JAMES BOBBY BUTLER FB.jpg James Bobby Butler initially was sentenced to 41 months in prison.(Photo public domain, Facebook)

Galvin inspected the hanging buck and found no tag: “One of these camp guys piped up and said, ‘That buck was shot by a lady from Louisiana and she’s inside the trailer. She’ll sign the tag.’”

“Huh? Hell no,” Galvin says. “They had an unsigned tag, but it was too late. I seized the buck. We’d only been there for minutes, but it was obvious: Regardless of what they were up to, they were a pack of liars.”

While Galvin issued tickets, Butler ran cover, claiming his Lone Star group was “a bunch of old deer hunting buddies,” who pooled money and leased ground.

“Who is the woman? Who is the guy with the woman?” Galvin asked.

“I’m not sure,” Butler answered. “I think they’re from Louisiana, but I don’t even know them.”

Clear as mud.

“Butler was all over the place,” Galvin recalls. “In one sentence, he told me they were all great friends. The next sentence, he denied knowledge of who he was hunting with.”

Lies, half-lies, and all points in between, the particulars of Butler’s unraveling story were of secondary concern. More importantly, Galvin and Thurman had just obtained a steaming pile of probable cause. Gung-ho to follow Butler’s hot trail, the pair of wardens didn’t yet realize the stakes: They had a tiger by the tail.

Word was already out: Come to Kansas and get a monster.

Horror Show Operation Cimarron, the coordinated sting of Butler’s poaching ring, went into high gear in November 2007. Lying in a depression at field’s edge adjacent to Camp Lone Star, Galvin, Thurman, Hanzlik, and other wardens began taking stakeout posts under cover of darkness, attempting to record license plate numbers and activity. Spooky as hellfire.

“We’d be there all night sometimes, just trying to catch a hint,” Galvin explains. “Their vehicle lights would cross you, and you’d breathe deep, wondering if you were exposed. There was a time or two when they sensed movement or something, because they threw spotlights over us, searching for anything out of place.”

CAMP LONE STAR 2.jpg There was more hidden behind the Camp Lone Star curtain than massive antlers. “Catching these guys became kind of like piecing together mob activity to track who was doing what,” says Thurman.(Photo courtesy of B.J. Thurman)

“We’d be watching from the other side of a fence,” Thurman concurs, “and they’d start spotlighting right outta the trailers, and we’d have nothing to hide behind except sagebrush. A spotlight going over your freaking head shined by bad guys with rifles is pretty damn uncomfortable.”

Meanwhile, Butler was leasing more land. Big ground: Box Ranch, Huck Ranch, Oasis 7 Ranch, and several smaller properties—over 50,000 acres. And the jet at Comanche County Airport was eating plenty of fuel hauling hunting guests. Bottom line: Galvin and Thurman needed more than stakeouts.

KING AIR POACHERS.jpg The King Air jet: “Burying and burning antlers, sneaking deer on airplanes, cutting off balls, moving drugs, and so much more,” Galvin exclaims.(Photo courtesy of B.J. Thurman)

Thurman reached for a friend with a bigger badge. He called a USFWS agent and detailed the suspected poaching ring situation. In came the feds. The agent tapped a DEA contact in Colorado and obtained the loan of a high-end, digital surveillance camera capable of zoom and pan. In November 2008, technology in hand, Galvin and Thurman hid the camera in plain sight.

How? Under the guise of standard maintenance work. A local co-op crew “repaired” the electric pole directly outside Camp Lone Star. Wearing a hard hat and disguised in blue collar gear, a federal agent placed the camera inside a fake transformer atop the pole.

“It all looked so real that a couple of the Texas boys walked out while the work was going on and started a casual conversation,” Thurman describes. “They never had a clue. This was the first time in conservation investigation history that this particular camera was used and it was awesome.”

PANORAMA ANTLERS.jpg Part of the Butler’s antler haul after seizure by Kansas officials.(Photo by KDWP)

The camera was the ultimate Trojan horse. Instantly, Galvin and Thurman had remote access to watch all movement around, in, and out of Camp Lone Star. A horror show in high def.

“Later, we would document them killing 119 deer at an average Boone & Crockett score of 159,” Thurman says. “At least 70 major trophy deer. One of the deer we later seized was a 185” 8-point. We learned that one of Butler’s poaching customers had first shot a 203” buck, and when he walked out to get it, the giant 8-point stood up—and he shot it too. They killed at such volume that it was becoming hard to find a true monster.”

There was more hidden behind the Camp Lone Star curtain than massive antlers. “They were stealing more than horns,” Thurman continues. “Catching these guys became kind of like piecing together mob activity to track who was doing what. That camera revealed a damn roadmap of crime.”

Extraction of Semen

As suspected, Butler was ringmaster. From deep East Texas, Butler managed High Roller Whitetails, a fenced deer farm in Center, a 17-mile jump from the Louisiana line. Without a guide license, Butler was flying scores of Texas and Louisiana clients to Camp Lone Star and charging $2,500 for archery hunts and $5,000-plus for firearm hunts.

MB Nacogdoches County Jail.jpg Marlin Butler (dec’d) initially was sentenced to 27 months in prison.(Photo by Nacogdoches County)

“If you flew up and killed three deer, that could be $15,000 in one go for Butler,” Thurman says. “And these clients made return trips.”

Butler’s younger brother, Marlin, 32, rode shotgun, receiving $500 per week as guide, tips from customers, and free hunting access.

“Marlin Butler (dec’d 2024), just like his brother, James, was a rough customer. Marlin had previous criminal charges from weapons to aggravated assault to resisting arrest to impersonating a public servant,” Thurman says.

Why did the Butler brothers choose Comanche County? Chickens and slots.

“I had always wondered how poaching rats located each other,” Galvin says. “In this case, we found out Butler had once been in prison for cock fighting. A local in our area, Huey Gray, was in the same prison for running illegal slot machines. They met in lockup and Huey told Butler all about our big deer. Butler came to take a look for himself and saw dollar signs.”

Behind Butler, Galvin suspected, was deep-pocketed Terry Bailey, a resident of Center and owner of High Roller Whitetails. “The Butler brothers handled the hunts, but we suspected Bailey was the money man who paid for the leases and owned the jet everyone flew on,” Galvin posits. “We were never able to prove Bailey had done anything illegal. He died (dec’d 2017) in a helicopter crash a few years later.”

“The Butlers came here at first to poach,” Galvin continues, “but then got into filming with a guy named Matt Moore, who had a hunting television show, Closing the Distance; and then came guiding; and then we believe came genetics and deer theft.”

To cloak illegal hunts, the Lone Star cabal used fall turkey permits, landowner permits, Unit 10 tags in Unit 16, doe tags, and a host of other false fronts. If checked in the field, Butler and company had the veneer of legitimacy. Essentially, a permit of any type was a master key to monsters.

“These dirtbags were going into nursing homes, paying old people $100 to put in for a permit, and then using it for their out-of-staters,” Galvin says. “It was beyond nuts.”

GALVIN THURMAN HANZLIK.jpg From left: Tracy Galvin, B.J. Thurman, and Brian Hanzlik—all integral components of Operation Cimarron.(Photo courtesy of KDWP)

“They left no stone unturned when it came to violating deer hunting regs,” subsequently described USFWS Special Agent John Brooks.

“They had people hunting without permits, exceeding bag limits, hunting the wrong units, shooting deer with illegal weapons for the season, they trespassed, used spotlights, shot deer from roads, just cut the heads off and left the meat to rot. I don’t know what they didn’t do.”

However, the level of disdain for conservation skyrocketed when Galvin began finding deer carcasses missing more than heads and racks. As in, bucks with scrotums removed. The implication: Extraction of semen.

“We suspected Butler and the Lone Star gang were flying testicles of monster deer to Texas to inseminate their pen-raised herd,” Galvin explains.

“You gotta understand, that’s how wild this investigation was, and Butler knew to cover his tracks,” Thurman says. “He was wary. One time, he had a table at a show somewhere in Texas, selling hunts as an outfitter. Two feds showed up to book a hunt and Butler said, ‘No.’ He smelled them out. He always had his ears up.”

Galvin and Thurman needed a voice on the inside—an informant. They needed someone to get sour and jump the Camp Lone Star reservation. They needed the boy from Beaumont.

Kicking in Doors Entirely independent from Camp Lone Star, a legitimate out-of-state bowhunter from Beaumont, Texas, who frequented south Kansas, befriended Galvin. The denizen of Beaumont, who had an acquaintance at Lone Star, would frequently provide Galvin with rumor-mill updates on camp activity. Second-hand info shared over a pot of coffee.

Coincidentally, Galvin and several locals often hunted farmland a half mile from one of Butler’s leases. During the 2007 rifle season, one of Galvin’s hunting friends, a Coldwater native, wounded a deer, and he and Galvin obtained landowner permission to blood-trail the buck onto a plot of land adjoining Butler’s lease.

RISINGER AND BAILEY.jpg Johnny Risinger, left, and Terry Bailey, two links in the investigative web of Operation Cimarron.(Photo courtesy of B.J. Thurman)

Butler spotted Galvin—and mistakenly assumed a stakeout was in process.

“What a lucky break,” Galvin says. “He thought we were out in that field coming for him and went paranoid. Butler was convinced one of his own guys had screwed him. They had a big falling out and one guy got all the blame. That one guy, who was buddies with my friend from Beaumont, was ready to talk to me.”

Days later, Galvin and a federal agent drove to Texas and let the canary sing. “Holy s***. He told us they were moving drugs. He told us all about the poaching. He told us they knew all the tag numbers on our vehicles. He told us they were watching us. He told us they’d tranquilized does and transported them alive to Texas.”

“He told us Butler was convinced I was flying around watching them from above, and so they had rules in the field: Kill a deer, take the head, and roll the body on its belly to hide the white from any air searches. Rules to be followed.”

The Butlers had turned Comanche County into a poaching mecca. “It was unreal,” Thurman says. “Butler’s right hand man was Johnny Risinger, a taxidermist from Center, and he was camera man for Closing the Distance, the hunting show. Butler transported deer to Risinger for taxidermy work, and those trophy bucks—illegally taken from Kansas—were hanging all over East Texas, and some in Louisiana.”

Galvin and Thurman were ready to pull the legal trigger on the Camp Lone Star wildlife crimes. “This case had so many rabbit trails, but we had to focus on the poaching,” Galvin describes. “We knew there were drugs involved and we searched their Blazer parked at the airport. A K-9 drug dog hit all over the vehicle, but we steered clear of that pursuit because if the DEA got involved, the drug charges would wash out the wildlife charges.”

By 2008, monster deer, once abundant in Comanche County, were getting hard to find. The Camp Lone Star shtick was wearing thin. “Even though Butler was still dumping money here, ranchers and farmers had finally had enough,” Galvin says. “Butler was making enemies.”

Despite video footage, eyewitness testimony, 159 names linked on a spreadsheet, and over 2,000 pages of documentation, Kansas authorities balked at prosecution. “They wouldn’t commit even though we had tons of evidence,” Thurman says. “But when Kansas declined, the feds said, ‘We’re in.’ Basically, our Kansas bosses got their hands forced. Suddenly, it was finally on. We had this s*** pinned down.”

Time to kick in doors.

The Brag Wall In April 2009, 45 officers converged for a takedown in Center, Texas. Under Thurman’s direction, 15 Kansans, 20 Texans, and 20 feds covertly set up a command post outside of town in a house with a profile tree of photos, charges, and relationships pinned on the wall—in the manner of the mafia.

BUTLER BROS HEADSHOTS.jpg The brothers Butler Camp Lone Star turned Comanche County and its monster bucks into Grand Central Station for out-of-state hunters.(Photos courtesy of B.J. Thurman)

Thurman had created a Rosetta Stone of the entire Camp Lone Star affair. He meticulously compiled an exhaustive breakdown of each suspect’s activity and association, all cross-referenced and tabbed to note every individual’s appearance in the overall record. The report was a major feather in Thurman’s cap, with the template later borrowed by the feds to peel the onion in other investigations.

Nothing was left to chance. In synchronized raids across three states, Thurman’s teams deployed in Texas, Kansas (Camp Lone Star in Coldwater), and Louisiana (Lake Charles and Monroe), hitting houses, sporting goods stores, and bars. “We seized mount after mount, and they didn’t even protest,” Thurman says. “They knew they were guilty.”

Once in motion, the law enforcement blitz was fierce: “It was intense as all hell,” Galvin says. “You’d pull up to a stoplight in Center and see two game warden trucks racing one way, and a third going another way. It was on.”

READYING RACKS FOR UHAUL.jpg KDWP wardens prepare mounts for transport to from Texas to Kansas.(Photo courtesy of B.J. Thurman)

Carrying Thurman’s report for reference, three-man interview squads—Kansan, Texan, and fed—were deployed for each suspect, ensuring the right mix of piss and honey. “It was pretty damn wild,” Thurman recalls. “At 9 a.m., we hit the first 10 suspects, and then the second 10, and so on, in tiers.”

On the first day alone, 40 deer were confiscated.

As word of the conservation sting shot across Shelby County, Butler’s cohorts went into panic mode, burying antlers in the woods, dumping horns in ponds, and burning racks in pits.

Each hit was surreal, none more so than the bust at Center Municipal Airport, conducted by KDWP Officer Brian Hanzlik and Texas Officer Ellis Powell of Lone Star Law television fame. The duo spotted Bailey’s jet taxiing on the airport runway and made a do-or-die stop. Powell raced down the tarmac and pulled in front of the aircraft, forcing the pilot, Brandon Sapp, to stop the aircraft.

“Ellis stopped right in front of the jet and Brian hauled out the pilot,” Galvin describes. “They laid him out on the runway, and he was in the crouched position, bawling his eyes out, fessing up to killing 11 deer. We wanted to seize the jet, but we never able to prove Bailey’s direct involvement.”

However, when officers searched Butler’s home (owned by Bailey), Galvin witnessed a moment of reckoning. “I was guarding out front while officers went in with a search warrant and suddenly Bailey pulls up in a pickup. He headed for the house, and I stuck my hand out to shake his hand, looked him in the eye, and said, ‘My name is Tracy Galvin. I’m a game warden from Kansas. Coldwater.’”

“It froze him. He got this faraway look and just kept shaking my hand over and over, and repeating, ‘Colllllllllllldwater. Collllllllllldwater. I believe it was a moment of realization and he couldn’t hide his gut reaction.”

GOING HOME WITH HAUL.jpg KDWP officers during the loading of mounts and racks in Texas. Galvin is seated center; Thurman is seated right.(Photo courtesy of B.J. Thurman)

All told, KDWP officers seized 133 mounts, averaging 160”. Anticipating a significant jumble of confiscated antlers, Galvin and Thurman had pulled a utility trailer to Center for the trip home. No dice. Too many horns. They had to rent a U-Haul to accommodate the trove.

“It was a moment of satisfaction,” Galvin describes. “Some of these guys were about to go to jail. But at the same time, looking at the truck filled with antlers made me sick to my stomach. These guys had total contempt for conservation. If given enough time, they’d have killed every big buck in our state.”

Back in Coldwater, the KDWP raid at Camp Lone Star added a pile of additional evidence. Butler’s brag wall told a tale. “Every frickin big buck they killed had a picture hanging,” Thurman details. “They were so proud of dropping our deer average from the 160”-170” range to the 140” range. All for money and greed.”

Poachers for Life

In March 2011, James Butler pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to violate the Lacey Act, one substantive Lacey Act count, and one count of obstruction of justice. Marlin Butler pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to violate the Lacey Act and one Lacey Act count.

Forty-one months in prison for James Butler and 27 months in prison for Marlin Butler, in addition to fines, restitution, and prohibitions from hunting and guiding activity. However, the siblings appealed, and a judge reduced the original sentences to 10 months and 8 months. Twenty-five of their associates also were prosecuted.

PRESS CONFERENCE.jpg Conservation officers announce the conclusion of Operation Cimarron. Thurman stands second from right.(Photo by KDWP)

Operation Cimarron, a six-year (three years of intense scrutiny, 2007-2009) poaching investigation, documented 120 federal felonies (beyond those lost to the statute of limitations), hundreds of state violations, 16,600” of illegal antlers, $500,000 traced to Camp Lone Star, 40 years of suspended licenses, multiple lifetime hunting bans, $80,500 in fines, $110,000 in restitution, and 119 mounts forfeited.

The groundbreaking case, from camera technology to the paperwork system used to track activity, permanently changed hunting violation investigations in Kansas and beyond.

“The judge let them off light,” Galvin, 75, says, “but this was the most worthwhile investigation of my career. It had to be done because what they were doing was intolerable. There were others involved we couldn’t get, and there was money we couldn’t trace, but this work was done to ensure nobody else tries something anywhere close to what Butler and his people did. B.J. Thurman and I were just doing our job, and we were only two guys among many making sure the bad guys went down. We were part of one big team across multiple agencies with so many people helping.”

Because Galvin and Thurman refused to spit the bit in the Camp Lone Star case, their tenacity ensured Kansas now has a trophy statute that puts a monetary value on deer and defines methodology to determine that value. “If this same stunt happens today, the poachers will do 10-15 years in jail,” Thurman says.

TEAM OF KANSAS WARDENS.jpg Part of the haul seized from the Butler brothers’ poaching ring. Thurman (second row, yellow shirt, cowboy hat) and Galvin (standing on Thurman’s right) bulldogged the Butlers and refused to let go of the case. “Don’t come to Kansas to poach,” Galvin says. “Stay the hell away.” (Photo courtesy of B.J. Thurman)

“Think about what they did: Wholesale slaughter,” Thurman, 65, concludes. “These were the most reckless and lowest form of poachers. They were in the process of killing almost every monster deer in our area. It was devastating to our population and herd genetics.”

Poachers for life? Absolutely, Galvin emphasizes. “Doesn’t matter if you prosecute, those individuals never stop. You can slow them down, but they’re in for life. However, you do everything you can to expose and prosecute as a deterrent, because the message gets out to others and the next generation: Don’t come to Kansas to poach. Stay the hell away.”

For more from Chris Bennett (@ChrisBennettMS or cbennett@farmjournal.com or 662-592-1106), see:

https://www.agweb.com/news/business/farmland/texas-poachers-busted-historic-kansas-sting-after-slaughter-119-monster-bu

THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2025

Texas Game Wardens Near Conclusion of ‘Ghost Deer’ Case with 24 Suspects, 1,400 Charges Filed Statewide

https://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/2025/08/texas-game-wardens-near-conclusion-of.html

https://prpsc.proboards.com/thread/178/texas-game-wardens-conclusion-ghost

WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2025

Texas CWD TSE Prion Cases Rises to 1099 Confirmed Cases To Date

https://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/2025/05/texas-cwd-tse-prion-cases-rises-to-1099.html

TAHC 425th Commission Meeting CWD 1:45:00

* See CWD speakers expressing their concerns with changed regulations…

2:00 hr mark

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=bWawHpdn_7I

TEXAS ANIMAL HEALTH COMMISSION 423rd Commission Meeting CWD Update February 25, 2025

https://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/2025/02/texas-animal-health-commission-423rd.html

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2025

Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission Meeting November 5-6, 2025 Agenda CWD TSE Prion

https://tpwd.texas.gov/business/feedback/meetings/2026/1106/agenda/work_session/

https://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/2025/10/texas-parks-and-wildlife-commission.html

https://prpsc.proboards.com/thread/181/tpwc-november-2025-agenda-prion

***> Department records indicate that within the last five years (since January 1, 2020), 30 deer breeding facilities where CWD has been confirmed transferred a total of 8,799 deer to 249 additional deer breeding facilities and 487 release sites located in a total of 144 counties in Texas. <***

https://www.sos.state.tx.us/texreg/pdf/backview/0411/0411adop.pdf

Texas Kimble County Farm Chronic Wasting Disease CWD TSE Prion Approximate Herd Prevalence 12%

SUMMARY MINUTES OF THE 407th COMMISSION MEETING Texas Animal Health Commission

September 22, 2020

Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD):

A new CWD positive breeding herd was disclosed in February 2020 in Kimble County. This herd depopulation was completed in July 2020. Including the two index positive deer, an additional eight more positive deer were disclosed (approximate herd prevalence 12%). Since July 2015 and prior to this discovery, five positive captive breeder herds have been disclosed and four of those are in Medina County. One herd in Lavaca and three herds in Medina County were depopulated leaving one large herd in Medina County that is managed on a herd plan. A new zone was established in Val Verde County in December 2019 as a result of a positive free-ranging White-tailed Deer (WTD). A second positive WTD was also disclosed in February 2020 in the same area.

SUMMARY MINUTES OF THE 407th COMMISSION MEETING – 9/22/2020

Scrapie: The flock identified in April 2016 remains under quarantine in Hartley County.

https://www.tahc.texas.gov/agency/meetings/minutes/SummaryMinutes_CommMtg_2020-09-22

http://web.archive.org/web/20201017124040/https://www.tahc.texas.gov/agency/meetings/minutes/SummaryMinutes_CommMtg_2020-09-22.pdf

Chronic Wasting Disease in Texas A Real Disease with Proven Impacts

Produced by a coalition of concerned hunters, landowners, & conservationists (last update 1/2025)

https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/b93f528938ac48e9b56dcc79953cbec0

Aug 18, 2021

Oh, Deer

Heading Off a Wildlife Epidemic

CWD poses a significant threat to the future of hunting in Texas. Deer population declines of 45 and 50 percent have been documented in Colorado and Wyoming. A broad infection of Texas deer populations resulting in similar population impacts would inflict severe economic damage to rural communities and could negatively impact land markets. Specifically, those landowners seeking to establish a thriving herd of deer could avoid buying in areas with confirmed CWD infections. As they do with anthrax-susceptible properties, land brokers may find it advisable to inquire about the status of CWD infections on properties that they present for sale. Prospective buyers should also investigate the status of the wildlife on prospective properties. In addition, existing landowners should monitor developments as TPWD crafts management strategies to identify and contain this deadly disease.

Dr. Gilliland (c-gilliland@tamu.edu) is a research economist with the Texas Real Estate Research Center at Texas A&M University.

https://www.recenter.tamu.edu/articles/tierra-grande/oh-d

TEXAS BREEDER DEER ESCAPEE WITH CWD IN THE WILD, or so the genetics would show?

OH NO, please tell me i heard this wrong, a potential Texas captive escapee with cwd in the wild, in an area with positive captive cwd herd?

apparently, no ID though. tell me it ain't so please...

23:00 minute mark

''Free Ranging Deer, Dr. Deyoung looked at Genetics of this free ranging deer and what he found was, that the genetics on this deer were more similar to captive deer, than the free ranging population, but he did not see a significant connection to any one captive facility that he analyzed, so we believe, Ahhhhhh, this animal had some captive ahhh, whatnot.''

https://youtu.be/aoPDeGL6mpQ?t=1384

Commission Agenda Item No. 5 Exhibit B

DISEASE DETECTION AND RESPONSE RULES

PROPOSAL PREAMBLE

1. Introduction.

snip...

A third issue is the accuracy of mortality reporting. Department records indicate that for each of the last five years an average of 26 deer breeders have reported a shared total of 159 escapes. Department records for the same time period indicate an average of 31 breeding facilities reported a shared total of 825 missing deer (deer that department records indicate should be present in the facility, but cannot be located or verified).

https://tpwd.texas.gov/business/feedback/meetings/2022/1104/agenda/item.phtml?item=5

On January 21, 2017 a tornado took down thousands of feet of fence for a 420-acre illegal deer enclosure in Lamar County that had been subject to federal and state investigation for illegally importing white-tailed deer into Mississippi from Texas (a CWD positive state). Native deer were free to move on and off the property before all of the deer were able to be tested for CWD. Testing will be made available for a period of three years for CWD on the property and will be available for deer killed within a 5-mile radius of the property on a voluntary basis.

https://www.mdwfp.com/media/254796/2016-17-deer-report.pdf

“It is interesting to note that, in 2001, the State of Texas shifted its deer management strategies toward the same leanings that Kroll has suggested for Wisconsin. In Texas, the change was brought about via heavy lobbying from the high-fence deer ranching industry. This pressure helped convince the Texas Parks and Wildlife to change their regulations and allow private landowners to select the own deer biologists.”

http://www.texasmonthly.com/story/which-side-fence-are-you

Chronic Wasting Disease in Texas

A Real Disease with Proven Impacts

Produced by a coalition of concerned hunters, landowners, & conservationists (last update 08/2023)

Snip…

Since 2012, CWD has been detected in wild deer in just 7 counties in Texas and is only established in the western panhandle and far west Texas.

In that same period of time, captive deer breeders have exposed almost half of Texas counties to CWD.

Deer held in captive breeding facilities are confined to much tighter spaces, and have intimate contact with many more animals on a daily basis. By far the greatest factor in amplifying the spread of CWD is the artificial movement of these animals, shipped in livestock trailers hundreds of miles, far outside of their natural home range, and ultimately released to co-mingle with wild deer.

Each year, Texas captive deer breeders liberate 20,000-30,000 deer from their pens to the wild.

For every deer breeding facility where a CWD positive deer is discovered, an epidemiological investigation is conducted by the Texas Parks & Wildlife Department and the Texas Animal Health Commission to determine how many other deer may have been exposed to the disease and where they have been shipped. Because of the prolific artificial movement of captive deer, one deer with CWD can impact hundreds of other facilities and ranches across the state.

Unfortunately, released deer in Texas are not required to retain any kind of visible identification (an ear tag), and for this reason, the vast majority of released deer cannot be relocated for testing.

As of August 2023, 116 Texas counties have received possibly infected breeder deer that cannot be located, putting more than 140,000 landowners at risk of the disease.

Snip

The state of Texas has been testing for CWD since 2002. Since that time, more than 302,360 captive and free range deer have been tested.

From 2015-2022, more than 127,000 samples were collected from hunter-harvested and roadkill deer. This sampling rate and risk-based distribution provides scientists confidence that they would have detected the disease if it existed at a very low prevalence (<1%) in any given region at the time sampling began.

Snip…

We have learned from other states where CWD has been present the longest, that a constant increase in the prevalence of the disease may lead to a significant decline in the deer population. When disease prevalence exceeds 20%, deer populations have declined by up to 50%. In some areas of Colorado, where CWD has been present since 1985, mule deer abundance has declined by 45% since that time, despite adequate habitat and no hunting ( Miller et al. 2008 ). Similarly, the South Converse Game Unit in Wyoming has documented CWD prevalence exceeding 50% and has seen an approximate 50% decline in mule deer populations.

Snip…

Rural Economies

Deer hunting is the lifeblood of rural Texas. White-tailed deer hunting is by far the most impactful segment of the hunting economy, representing $4.3 billion, according to a recent Texas A&M Study. And while deer breeders represent a very small segment of that economy (less than 5%), they represent one of the greatest risks. ( Full Texas A&M Report )

Real Estate

Rural land prices are largely driven by recreational buyers with hunting as a top land amenity. Without deer hunting, many of these properties will be worth much less.

Conservation Funding

Deer hunters are the largest funders of wildlife conservation in Texas through excise taxes on firearms, ammunition, and gear along with active membership supporting and funding conservation organizations. If deer hunting suffers due to CWD, all wildlife in Texas lose.

Culture & Health

Texas’ native deer herd has iconic value for all Texans. Deer hunting brings families together, creates camaraderie in communities, and serves to connect Texans to nature. There is no better protein than wild, locally harvested, non-GMO and totally organic venison. A healthy deer herd leads to healthy Texans and a healthy and prosperous Texas.

Snip…

This isn't a disease for our lifetime. It's a disease for our grandchildren's lifetime.

- Dr. Bob Dittmar, Former Texas State Wildlife Veterinarian

Snip…

See the full text with maps, graphs, much more, excellent data…

https://bit.ly/3xL16Gm

Since 2012, CWD has been detected in wild deer in just 7 counties in Texas and is only established in the western panhandle and far west Texas.

In that same period of time, captive deer breeders have exposed almost half of Texas counties to CWD.

https://bit.ly/3xL16Gm

As of August 2023, 116 Texas counties have received possibly infected breeder deer that cannot be located, putting more than 140,000 landowners at risk of the disease.

https://bit.ly/3xL16Gm

ECONOMIC VALUES OF WHITE-TAILED DEER IN TEXAS

2022 SURVEY: PART I

http://web.archive.org/web/20230809171452/https://nri.tamu.edu/media/3702/economic-values-of-white-tailed-deer-in-texas-2022-survey-part-i.pdf

Don't mess Texas, or with Mother Nature in Texas, but, seems things went terribly wrong down here in Texas with CWD, be careful what you ask for;

TEXAS CWD STRAIN

“Wow,” he said. “Unlike anything we've seen before.”

The disease devastating deer herds may also threaten human health

Scientists are exploring the origins of chronic wasting disease before it becomes truly catastrophic.

Rae Ellen Bichell

Image credit: David Parsons/Istock

April 8, 2019

This story was published in collaboration with the Mountain West News Bureau, a collaboration between Wyoming Public Media, Boise State Public Radio in Idaho, KUER in Salt Lake City and KRCC and KUNC in Colorado.

SNIP...

One day in late February, in their laboratory in Fort Collins, Colorado, Wagner and Zabel compared the prions from the brains of CWD-infected deer in Texas with those of elk in Colorado. They want to know if the proteins were all mangled in the same way, or not. “If they are different, this would suggest that we have different strain properties, which is evidence as we're building our case that we might have multiple strains of CWD circulating in the U.S.,” says Wagner.

Step one is to see if they’re equally easy to destroy using a chemical called guanidine. The shape of a prion dictates everything, including the way it interacts with an animal’s cells and the ease with which chemicals can unfold it.

“Moment of truth,” said Wagner, as she and Zabel huddled around a computer, waiting for results to come through. When they did, Zabel was surprised.

“Wow,” he said. “Unlike anything we've seen before.”

The prions from the Texas deer were a lot harder to destroy than the ones from the Colorado elk. In fact, the guanidine barely damaged them at all. “We’ve never seen that before in any prion strain, which means that it has a completely different structure than we've ever seen before,” says Zabel. And that suggests that it might be a very different kind of chronic wasting disease. The researchers ran the same test on another Texas deer, with the same results.

Now, these are only the preliminary results from a few animals. Wagner and Zabel have a lot more experiments to do. But if future tests come to the same conclusion, it would support their hypothesis that there are multiple strains of chronic wasting disease out there, all with different origins. That, in turn, could mean that this disease will become even trickier to manage than it already is.

And, Zabel adds, there’s something else. “If it's still evolving, it may still evolve into a form that could potentially, eventually affect humans,” he says.

Zabel is not the only one worried about that possibility.

OSTERHOLM, THE EPIDEMIOLOGIST from Minnesota, is also concerned. He directs the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, and is serving a one-year stint as a “Science Envoy for Health Security” with the U.S. State Department. In February, he told Minnesota lawmakers that when it comes to chronic wasting disease, we are playing with fire. “You are going to hear from people that this is not going to be a problem other than a game farm issue. You're going to hear from people that it's not going to transmit to people, and I hope they're right, but I wouldn't bet on it,” he said. “And if we lose this one and haven’t done all we can do, we will pay a price.”

If that wasn’t warning enough, he added: “Just remember what happened in England.”

He was talking about mad cow disease. Decades ago, Osterholm got involved in studying the potential for the newly emerging condition — bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or BSE for short — to be transmitted to humans.

At that point, researchers had yet to document a prion disease in animals that could infect people. They did, however, have a few pieces of the puzzle. For one, work in Papua New Guinea had shown that people could transmit prion diseases to each other if they practiced cannibalism, especially of the brain-eating variety. They also knew that BSE was spreading quickly between cattle. Osterholm says he and others worried that the more widespread it became, the more chances it might have to change into something that could sicken people.

“A lot of people thought that it was an overreaction,” says Osterholm. “Then, of course, in 1996, 10 years later, we recognized that in fact transmission had occurred.” Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, as the illness is called when it appears in human beings, has infected about 230 people worldwide. Osterholm says he feels like he’s having déjà vu, except that instead of mad cow, now it’s chronic wasting disease that’s spreading in animals, with the potential to cross the species barrier to infect humans.

SNIP...SEE FULL TEXT;

https://www.hcn.org/articles/wildlife-the-disease-devastating-deer-herds-may-also-threaten-human-health-science

TEXAS CWD STRAIN

77. Assessing chronic wasting disease strain differences in free-ranging cervids across the United States

Kaitlyn M. Wagnera, Caitlin Ott-Connb, Kelly Strakab, Bob Dittmarc, Jasmine Battend, Robyn Piercea, Mercedes Hennessya, Elizabeth Gordona, Brett Israela, Jenn Ballarde and Mark D Zabela

aPrion Research Center at Colorado State University; bMichigan Department of Natural Resources; cTexas Parks and Wildlife Department; dMissouri Department of Conservation, 5. Arkansas Game and Fish Commission CONTACT Kaitlyn M. Wagner miedkait@rams.colostate.edu

ABSTRACT

Background/Introduction: Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is an invariably fatal prion disease affecting captive and free-ranging cervids, including white-tailed deer, mule deer, moose, elk, and reindeer. Since the initial description of the disease in the 1960’s, CWD has spread to 23 states, 3 Canadian Provinces, South Korea, Norway and, most recently, Finland. While some outbreaks of CWD were caused by transport of infected animals from endemic regions, the origin of CWD in other epizootics is unclear and has not been characterized. Previous studies have shown that there are two distinct strains of CWD. However, the continuous spread and the unclear origin of several outbreaks warrant continued surveillance and further characterization of strain diversity.

Materials and Methods: To address these knowledge gaps, we used biochemical tests to assess strain differences between CWD outbreaks in Michigan, Texas, Missouri, and Colorado, USA. Brain or lymph node samples were homogenized and digested in 50 µg/mL proteinase K (PK). These samples were then run on a Western blot to assess glycoform ratio and electrophoretic mobility. Texas samples were digested in 100 µg/mL PK. To assess conformational stability, brain or lymph node homogenates were incubated in increasing concentrations of guanidine hydrochloride from 0 M to 4 M in 0.5 M increments. Samples were then precipitated in methanol overnight, washed and PK digested in 50 µg/mL PK before slot blotting.

Results: Our results have found significant differences in glycoform ratio between CWD from Michigan and Colorado, but no differences were observed in conformational stability assays. Interestingly, when testing our CWD isolates from Texas to analyse electrophoretic mobility and glycoform ratio, we found that these samples did not exhibit the characteristic band shift when treated with PK, but PK resistant material remained. Additionally, results from our conformational stability assay demonstrate a unique profile of these Texas isolates. Testing of samples from Missouri is currently underway.

Conclusions: Thus far, our data indicate that there are strain differences between CWD circulating in Michigan and CWD in Colorado and provide important insight into CWD strain differences between two non-contiguous outbreaks. We have also identified a unique strain of CWD in Texas with biochemical strain properties not seen in any of our other CWD isolates. These results highlight the importance of continued surveillance to better understand this devastating disease. These results have important implications for CWD emergence, evolution and our understanding of prion strain heterogeneity on the landscape.

http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/19336896.2019.1615197

Texas Game Wardens Bust Illegal Deer Operations Across the State Feb. 27, 2025

Media Contact: TPWD News, Business Hours, 512-389-8030

AUSTIN – A recent investigation by Texas Game Wardens resulted in approximately 1,200 pending charges and 22 suspects from across the state involved in the deer breeding industry and black-market wildlife trade.

The suspects and charges are associated with three deer breeding facilities, ten release sites, one deer management pen and three illegal facilities not registered in the Texas Wildlife Information Management Services (TWIMS) database, meaning they were operating or receiving deer in violation of registration requirements and disease monitoring protocols.

https://tpwd.texas.gov/newsmedia/releases/?req=20250227b

Texas Game Wardens Bust Illegal Deer Operations Across the State Feb. 27, 2025

https://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/2025/02/texas-game-wardens-bust-illegal-deer.html

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2025

TEXAS ANIMAL HEALTH COMMISSION 423rd Commission Meeting CWD Update February 25, 2025

https://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/2025/02/texas-animal-health-commission-423rd.html

SUNDAY, MAY 04, 2025

Texas Senate Bill 2649 creation of a statewide Chronic Wasting Disease plan

https://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/2025/05/texas-senate-bill-2649-creation-of.html

SUNDAY, MAY 04, 2025

Texas Senate Bill 2651 establishment of a pilot program to breed deer resistant to CWD TSE Prion, what could go wrong?

https://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/2025/05/texas-senate-bill-2651-establishment-of_4.html

Texas S.B. 2843 Directs TPWD to conduct a comprehensive study of current measures to control chronic wasting disease (CWD) in deer

Trying to legislate CWD is what got Texas in this CWD mess to begin with, how did that work out$$$ Legislators and Politicians need to stay away and let TPWD and TAHC et try and contain this mess that Legislators and Politicians got us in, called CWD TSE Prion…terry

https://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/2025/04/texas-sb-2843-directs-tpwd-to-conduct.html

THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2025

CWD TSE Prion, Politics, Friendly Fire, Unforeseen Consequences, What If?

https://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/2025/04/cwd-tse-prion-politics-friendly-fire.html

Friday, February 21, 2025

Deer don’t die from CWD, it’s the insurance companies, or it's a Government conspiracy?

https://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/2025/02/deer-dont-die-from-cwd-its-insurance.html

THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2025

***> US Captive CWD Positive Herds Update April 2025

https://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/2025/04/us-captive-cwd-positive-herds-update.html

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2025

Chronic Wasting Disease CWD TSE Prion Environmental Factors Update

https://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/2025/09/chronic-wasting-disease-cwd-tse-prion.html

Captive CHRONIC WASTING DISEASE CASES Update August 2025 

https://www.aphis.usda.gov/sites/default/files/status-of-captive-herds.pdf

Chronic wasting disease (CWD) prion detection in environmental and biological samples from a taxidermy site and nursing facility, and instruments used in surveillance activities

Author links open overlay panel Paulina Soto a b , Nancy Ho a , Mitch Lockwood c , Austin Stolte c , J. Hunter Reed c , Rodrigo Morales a b

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2025.179318

• CWD prions were identified in a taxidermy and deer nursing facility.

• Contaminated samples included waters, soils, dermestid beetles, domestic flies and a dumpster.

• Surgical instruments used to collect deer samples can get contaminated with CWD prions.

• Some of the infectious particles are readily released from surgical instruments when washed.

• Our results suggest that taxidermy practices actively contribute in the spreading of CWD.

Abstract

Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a transmissible prionopathy affecting free-ranging and captive cervids. CWD is thought to spread through both direct and indirect transmission mechanisms. Along this line, human activities have not been thoroughly explored for their potential to spread this disease. One area of concern involves taxidermy procedures and surveillance activities as handled animals or carcasses are of unknown CWD statuses. Worrisomely, taxidermy facilities can act as foci of prion infectivity if appropriate biosecurity practices are not implemented. In this study, we evaluated the presence of infectious prions in a taxidermy facility that was possibly exposed to CWD prions. To determine this, we collected biological and environmental specimens from this site and screened them using the protein misfolding cyclic amplification (PMCA) technique. Additionally, we swabbed different surfaces possibly exposed to CWD-infected animals or carcasses. We report the presence of prions in i) waters used to digest tissues from deer carcasses, ii) soils that were in contact with the previously mentioned waters, iii) dermestid beetles used to clean skulls, iv) other insects found in the beetle shed, and iv) dumpsters where animal carcasses were disposed. Additionally, we report that surgical materials used in surveillance practices may also hold CWD prions, even after being washed with aqueous solutions. All these results suggest that CWD prions may be disseminated due to human practices and that protocols should be established to decontaminate potentially contaminated materials.

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0048969725009544?via%3Dihub

one of the old studies that has always stuck out in my mind, one that the late great Dr. Gibbs, Gajdusek, et al did way back, and to this day is still amazes me...friendly fire, iatrogenic transmission, including field dressing a deer, includes risks for exposure to the Cwd tse prion…take precautions!

*** Transmission of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease to a chimpanzee by electrodes contaminated during neurosurgery ***

Gibbs CJ Jr, Asher DM, Kobrine A, Amyx HL, Sulima MP, Gajdusek DC.

Laboratory of Central Nervous System Studies, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892. Stereotactic multicontact electrodes used to probe the cerebral cortex of a middle aged woman with progressive dementia were previously implicated in the accidental transmission of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) to two younger patients. The diagnoses of CJD have been confirmed for all three cases. More than two years after their last use in humans, after three cleanings and repeated sterilisation in ethanol and formaldehyde vapour, the electrodes were implanted in the cortex of a chimpanzee. Eighteen months later the animal became ill with CJD. This finding serves to re-emphasise the potential danger posed by reuse of instruments contaminated with the agents of spongiform encephalopathies, even after scrupulous attempts to clean them.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=8006664&dopt=Abstract

Captive CHRONIC WASTING DISEASE CASES Update August 2025, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Utah, and Texas

https://www.aphis.usda.gov/sites/default/files/status-of-captive-herds.pdf

https://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/2025/08/texas-game-wardens-near-conclusion-of.html

Published: 05 August 2025

Vertical transmission of chronic wasting disease in free-ranging white-tailed deer populations

Snip…

Our detection of CWD-positive fawns ≤ 10-month-old by ELISA testing provides indirect evidence of gestational infection, although direct or indirect CWD transmission after birth cannot be ruled out in these fawns (Table 5). The detection of CWD infection in ≤ 6-month-old fawns in the Arkansas and Tennessee study sites by ELISA test, which is not as sensitive as amplification assays37, was particularly suggestive of vertical transmission. Fawns less than 6 months of age are not routinely incorporated into statewide CWD surveillance programs because of the low likelihood of detectable infection using traditional assays (i.e., ELISA, IHC), yet have been previously identified17. Future studies should investigate the potential role of in utero transmission in local CWD transmission cycles. Considering the strong relationship between CWD infection probability and female white-tailed deer relatedness, in utero CWD transmission may serve as a small yet important route of transmission in addition to social interactions and indirect exposures53.

Overall, this study describes the dissemination of CWD prions throughout tissues and birthing fluids of the pregnancy microenvironment demonstrating that offspring are routinely exposed to the infectious prion in-utero prior to parturition. We report infectious prions in the reproductive and fetal tissue of naturally exposed free-ranging white-tailed deer suggesting that in utero maternal transmission is likely an underappreciated mode of CWD transmission. Our study shows that vertical transmission is indeed a viable route of infection within the southeastern U.S. and is another potential factor contributing to the relentless spread of chronic wasting disease.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-025-12727-8

Just remember;

Chronic Wasting Disease CWD TSE Prion

THE CWD TSE Prion aka mad cow type disease is not your normal pathogen.

The TSE prion disease survives ashing to 600 degrees celsius, that’s around 1112 degrees farenheit.

It’s not your ordinary pathogen you can just cook it out and be done.

You cannot cook the TSE prion disease out of meat. In fact new data now shows that exposure to high temperatures used to cook the meat increased the availability of prions for in vitro amplification.

You can take the ash and mix it with saline and inject that ash into a mouse, and the mouse will go down with TSE.

Prion Infected Meat-and-Bone Meal Is Still Infectious after Biodiesel Production as well.

The TSE prion agent also survives Simulated Wastewater Treatment Processes.

The TSE agent is capable of infected your water table i.e. Detection of protease-resistant cervid prion protein in water from a CWD-endemic area.

IN fact, you should also know that the TSE Prion agent will survive in the environment for years, if not decades. 15 to 21 years.

You can bury it and it will not go away.

Prions in Waterways

https://vimeo.com/898941380?fbclid=IwAR3Di7tLuU-iagCetdt4-CVPrOPQQrv037QS1Uxz0tX3z7BuvPeYlwIp7IY

Prion. 2009 Jul-Sep;3(3):171–183. doi: 10.4161/pri.3.3.9819

Detection of protease-resistant cervid prion protein in water from a CWD-endemic area

TA Nichols 1,2, Bruce Pulford 1, A Christy Wyckoff 1,2, Crystal Meyerett 1, Brady Michel 1, Kevin Gertig 3, Edward A Hoover 1, Jean E Jewell 4, Glenn C Telling 5, Mark D Zabel 1,

Abstract

Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is the only known transmissible spongiform encephalopathy affecting free-ranging wildlife. Although the exact mode of natural transmission remains unknown, substantial evidence suggests that prions can persist in the environment, implicating components thereof as potential prion reservoirs and transmission vehicles.1–4 CWD-positive animals may contribute to environmental prion load via decomposing carcasses and biological materials including saliva, blood, urine and feces.5–7 Sensitivity limitations of conventional assays hamper evaluation of environmental prion loads in soil and water. Here we show the ability of serial protein misfolding cyclic amplification (sPMCA) to amplify a 1.3 × 10−7 dilution of CWD-infected brain homogenate spiked into water samples, equivalent to approximately 5 × 107 protease resistant cervid prion protein (PrPCWD) monomers. We also detected PrPCWD in one of two environmental water samples from a CWD endemic area collected at a time of increased water runoff from melting winter snow pack, as well as in water samples obtained concurrently from the flocculation stage of water processing by the municipal water treatment facility. Bioassays indicated that the PrPCWD detected was below infectious levels. These data demonstrate detection of very low levels of PrPCWD in the environment by sPMCA and suggest persistence and accumulation of prions in the environment that may promote CWD transmission.

Snip…

The data presented here demonstrate that sPMCA can detect low levels of PrPCWD in the environment, corroborate previous biological and experimental data suggesting long term persistence of prions in the environment2,3 and imply that PrPCWD accumulation over time may contribute to transmission of CWD in areas where it has been endemic for decades. This work demonstrates the utility of sPMCA to evaluate other environmental water sources for PrPCWD, including smaller bodies of water such as vernal pools and wallows, where large numbers of cervids congregate and into which prions from infected animals may be shed and concentrated to infectious levels.

Key words: prions, chronic wasting disease, water, environment, serial protein misfolding cyclic amplification

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2802782/

Detection of chronic wasting disease prions in soil at an illegal white-tailed deer carcass disposal site

Published online: 06 Jun 2025

Abstract

Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a contagious prion disorder affecting cervids such as deer, elk, caribou, and moose, causing progressive and severe neurological degeneration followed by eventual death. As CWD prions (PrPSc) accumulate in the body, they are shed through excreta and secreta, as well as through decomposing carcasses. Prions can persist in the environment for years, posing significant concerns for ongoing transmission to susceptible cervids and pose an unknown risk to sympatric species. We used a validated protocol for real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC) in vitro prion amplification assay to detect prions in soil collected within and around an illegal white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus, WTD) carcass disposal site and associated captive WTD farm in Beltrami County, Minnesota. We detected PrPSc in 26 of 201 soil samples across 15 locations within the illegal disposal site and one on the farm that housed the cervids. Importantly, a subset of RT-QuIC positive soil samples was collected from soils where carcasses were recovered, providing direct evidence that environmental contamination resulted from this illegal activity. These findings reveal that improper cervid carcass disposal practices may have important implications for ongoing CWD transmission through the environment.

Snip…

Conclusions

Using RT-QuIC, we detected PrPSc in 26 of 201 soil samples collected across 16 locations on public land where WTD carcasses had been disposed and the captive facility from where they originated. Within the disposal site, 25 out of 124 soil samples (20%) tested positive for PrPSc. Among those positive detections, 17, or 68%, were collected from locations where CWD-positive WTD remains had been previously recovered. This environmental investigation demonstrates how improper cervid carcass disposal practices can result in persistent environmental contamination, posing a potential risk to wildlife health. Given that disposal of livestock on the landscape is a common practice among producers [Citation54–56], these findings underscore the need for improved disposal practices and further investigation of environmental impacts. Expanding on this area of environmental research is crucial as the geographic range of CWD continues to expand [Citation57]. The use of RT-QuIC for prion detection in environmental samples offers an exciting advancement to environmental surveillance for prions, though as we demonstrate here and in Grunklee et al. [Citation41], assay optimization and validation for use with different environmental samples, including new soil types, is still necessary. Further enhancements to RT-QuIC and other methodologies for prion detection will facilitate more opportunities to explore the persistence, degradation, transport, and remediation of environmental prions.

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/19336896.2025.2514947

While the disease control measures effectively eliminated prion seeding activity in CWD-affected farms, CWD recurred at two of the 18 remediated farms 4 to 5 years after restocking animals. It remains unclear whether the recurrence of CWD at the two farms was due to residual prions in the environment after the control measures, or the introduction of the infected animals from other farms. This uncertainty is heightened by the annual occurrence of CWD at multiple farms and the absence of a traceability system for farmed cervids.

Keywords: Chronic wasting disease (CWD); NaOH; Protein-misfolding cyclic amplification (PMCA); Republic of Korea; farm; prions; remediation; topsoil.

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/19336896.2025.2527588

“While the disease control measures effectively eliminated prion seeding activity in CWD-affected farms, CWD recurred at two of the 18 remediated farms 4 to 5 years after restocking animals.”

I remember what “deep throat” told me about Scrapie back around 2001, during early days of my BSE investigation, after my Mom died from hvCJD, I never forgot, and it seems it’s come to pass;

***> Confidential!!!!

***> As early as 1992-3 there had been long studies conducted on small pastures containing scrapie infected sheep at the sheep research station associated with the Neuropathogenesis Unit in Edinburgh, Scotland. Whether these are documented...I don't know. But personal recounts both heard and recorded in a daily journal indicate that leaving the pastures free and replacing the topsoil completely at least 2 feet of thickness each year for SEVEN years....and then when very clean (proven scrapie free) sheep were placed on these small pastures.... the new sheep also broke out with scrapie and passed it to offspring. I am not sure that TSE contaminated ground could ever be free of the agent!! A very frightening revelation!!!

---end personal email---end...tss

and so it seems…

so, this is what we leave our children and grandchildren?

Rapid recontamination of a farm building occurs after attempted prion removal

First published: 19 January 2019 https://doi.org/10.1136/vr.105054

The data illustrates the difficulty in decontaminating farm buildings from scrapie, and demonstrates the likely contribution of farm dust to the recontamination of these environments to levels that are capable of causing disease.

snip...

This study clearly demonstrates the difficulty in removing scrapie infectivity from the farm environment. Practical and effective prion decontamination methods are still urgently required for decontamination of scrapie infectivity from farms that have had cases of scrapie and this is particularly relevant for scrapie positive goatherds, which currently have limited genetic resistance to scrapie within commercial breeds.24 This is very likely to have parallels with control efforts for CWD in cervids.

https://bvajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1136/vr.105054

***>This is very likely to have parallels with control efforts for CWD in cervids.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30602491/

Front. Vet. Sci., 14 September 2015 | https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2015.00032

Objects in contact with classical scrapie sheep act as a reservoir for scrapie transmission

In conclusion, the results in the current study indicate that removal of furniture that had been in contact with scrapie-infected animals should be recommended, particularly since cleaning and decontamination may not effectively remove scrapie infectivity (31), even though infectivity declines considerably if the pasture and the field furniture have not been in contact with scrapie-infected sheep for several months. As sPMCA failed to detect PrPSc in furniture that was subjected to weathering, even though exposure led to infection in sheep, this method may not always be reliable in predicting the risk of scrapie infection through environmental contamination.

http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fvets.2015.00032/full

"Additionally, we have determined that prion seeding activity is retained for at least fifteen years at a contaminated site following attempted remediation."

15 YEARS!

Detection of prions in soils contaminated by multiple routes

Results: We are able to detect prion seeding activity at multiple types of environmental hotspots, including carcass sites, contaminated captive facilities, and scrapes (i.e. urine and saliva). Differences in relative prion concentration vary depending on the nature and source of the contamination. Additionally, we have determined that prion seeding activity is retained for at least fifteen years at a contaminated site following attempted remediation.

Conclusions: Detection of prions in the environment is of the utmost importance for controlling chronic wasting disease spread. Here, we have demonstrated a viable method for detection of prions in complex environmental matrices. However, it is quite likely that this method underestimates the total infectious prion load in a contaminated sample, due to incomplete recovery of infectious prions. Further refinements are necessary for accurate quantification of prions in such samples, and to account for the intrinsic heterogeneities found in the broader environment.

Funded by: Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources

Prion 2023 Abstracts

https://prion2023.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Meeting-book-final-version2.pdf

SUNDAY, APRIL 06, 2025

Failure to prevent classical scrapie after repeated decontamination of a barn

https://scrapie-usa.blogspot.com/2025/04/failure-to-prevent-classical-scrapie.html

https://prpsc.proboards.com/thread/165/failure-prevent-scrapie-repeated-decontamination

CWD, So, this is what we leave our children and grandchildren?

Detection of chronic wasting disease prions in the farm soil of the Republic of Korea

Here, we show that prion seeding activity was detected in extracts from farm soil following 4 years of incubation with CWD-infected brain homogenate.

https://journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/msphere.00866-24

Artificial mineral sites that pre-date endemic chronic wasting disease become prion hotspots

The detection of PrPCWD in soils at attractant sites within an endemic CWD zone significantly advances our understanding of environmental PrPCWD accumulation dynamics, providing valuable information for advancing adaptive CWD management approaches.

https://int-cwd-sympo.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/final-agenda-with-abstracts.pdf

Chronic wasting disease detection in environmental and biological samples from a taxidermy site

Results: The PMCA analysis demonstrated CWD seeding activity in some of the components of this facility, including insects involved in head processing, soils, and a trash dumpster.

Conclusions: Different areas of this property were used for various taxidermy procedures. We were able to detect the presence of prions in i) soils that were in contact with the heads of dead animals, ii) insects involved in the cleaning of skulls, and iii) an empty dumpster where animal carcasses were previously placed. This is the first report demonstrating that swabbing is a helpful method to screen for prion infectivity on surfaces potentially contaminated with CWD. These findings are relevant as this swabbing and amplification strategy may be used to evaluate the disease status of other free-ranging and captive settings where there is a concern for CWD transmissions, such as at feeders and water troughs with CWD-exposed properties. This approach could have substantial implications for free-ranging cervid surveillance as well as in epidemiological investigations of CWD.

Prion 2022 Conference abstracts: pushing the boundaries

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/19336896.2022.2091286

https://intcwdsympo.files.wordpress.com/2023/06/final-agenda-with-abstracts.pdf?force_download=true

***> Infectious agent of sheep scrapie may persist in the environment for at least 16 years

***> Nine of these recurrences occurred 14–21 years after culling, apparently as the result of environmental contamination, but outside entry could not always be absolutely excluded.

JOURNAL OF GENERAL VIROLOGY Volume 87, Issue 12

Infectious agent of sheep scrapie may persist in the environment for at least 16 years Free

https://www.microbiologyresearch.org/content/journal/jgv/10.1099/vir.0.82011-0

Rapid recontamination of a farm building occurs after attempted prion removal

First published: 19 January 2019 https://doi.org/10.1136/vr.105054

The data illustrates the difficulty in decontaminating farm buildings from scrapie, and demonstrates the likely contribution of farm dust to the recontamination of these environments to levels that are capable of causing disease. snip...

This study clearly demonstrates the difficulty in removing scrapie infectivity from the farm environment. Practical and effective prion decontamination methods are still urgently required for decontamination of scrapie infectivity from farms that have had cases of scrapie and this is particularly relevant for scrapie positive goatherds, which currently have limited genetic resistance to scrapie within commercial breeds.24 This is very likely to have parallels with control efforts for CWD in cervids.

https://bvajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1136/vr.105054

***>This is very likely to have parallels with control efforts for CWD in cervids.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30602491/

New studies on the heat resistance of hamster-adapted scrapie agent: Threshold survival after ashing at 600°C suggests an inorganic template of replication

http://www.pnas.org/content/97/7/3418.full

Prion Infected Meat-and-Bone Meal Is Still Infectious after Biodiesel Production

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2493038/

Rapid assessment of bovine spongiform encephalopathy prion inactivation by heat treatment in yellow grease produced in the industrial manufacturing process of meat and bone meals

https://bmcvetres.biomedcentral.com/track/pdf/10.1186/1746-6148-9-134.pdf

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 2019

BSE infectivity survives burial for five years with only limited spread

https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2Fs00705-019-04154-8.pdf

So, this is what we leave our children and grandchildren?

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2025

Chronic Wasting Disease CWD TSE Prion Environmental Factors Update

https://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/2025/09/chronic-wasting-disease-cwd-tse-prion.html

https://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/

Chronic Wasting Disease CWD TSE Prion Environmental & Zoonosis Factors Update September 2025

What does CDC say?

CDC CWD TSE Prion Update 2025

KEY POINTS

Chronic wasting disease affects deer, elk and similar animals in the United States and a few other countries.

The disease hasn't been shown to infect people.

However, it might be a risk to people if they have contact with or eat meat from animals infected with CWD.

https://www.cdc.gov/chronic-wasting/about/index.html

Prions in Muscles of Cervids with Chronic Wasting Disease, Norway

Volume 31, Number 2—February 2025

Research

Prions in Muscles of Cervids with Chronic Wasting Disease, Norway

Snip…

In summary, the results of our study indicate that prions are widely distributed in peripheral and edible tissues of cervids in Norway, including muscles. This finding highlights the risk of human exposure to small amounts of prions through handling and consuming infected cervids. Nevertheless, we note that this study did not investigate the zoonotic potential of the Norway CWD prions. In North America, humans have historically consumed meat from CWD-infected animals, which has been documented to harbor prions (35,44–47). Despite the potential exposure to prions, no epidemiologic evidence indicates a correlation between the occurrence of CWD cases in animals and the prevalence of human prion diseases (48). A recent bioassay study reported no transmissions from 3 Nordic isolates into transgenic mice expressing human PrP (49). Therefore, our findings should be interpreted with caution in terms of human health implications, and further research is required to determine the zoonotic potential of these CWD strains.

The presence of prions in peripheral tissues indicates that CWD may have a systemic nature in all Norwegian cervid species, challenging the view that prions are exclusively localized in the CNS in sporadic CWD of moose and red deer. Our findings expand the notion of just how widely distributed prions can be in cervids affected with CWD and call into question the capability of emerging CWD strains in terms of infectivity to other species, including humans.

Appendix

https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/31/2/24-0903-app1.pdf

https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/31/2/24-0903_article

Volume 31, Number 2—February 2025

Dispatch

Detection of Chronic Wasting Disease Prions in Raw, Processed, and Cooked Elk Meat, Texas, USA

Rebeca Benavente, Fraser Brydon, Francisca Bravo-Risi, Paulina Soto, J. Hunter Reed, Mitch Lockwood, Glenn Telling, Marcelo A. Barria, and Rodrigo MoralesComments to Author

Snip…

CWD prions have been detected in the muscle of both farmed and wild deer (10), and at concentrations relevant to sustain disease transmission (11). CWD prions have also been identified across several cervid species and in multiple tissues, including lymph nodes, spleen, tongue, intestines, adrenal gland, eyes, reproductive tissues, ears, lungs, and liver, among others (12–14). Those findings raise concerns about the safety of ingesting processed meats that contain tissues other than skeletal muscle (15) (Appendix). https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/31/2/24-0906-app1.pdf

In addition, those findings highlight the need for continued vigilance and research on the transmission risks of prion diseases and for development of new preventative and detection measures to ensure the safety of the human food supply.

Snip…

Overall, our study results confirm previous reports describing the presence of CWD prions in elk muscles (13). The data also demonstrated CWD prion persistence in food products even after processing through different procedures, including the addition of salts, spices, and other edible elements. Of note, our data show that exposure to high temperatures used to cook the meat increased the availability of prions for in vitro amplification. Considering the potential implications in food safety and public health, we believe that the findings described in this study warrant further research. Our results suggest that although the elk meat used in this study resisted different manipulations involved in subsequent consumption by humans, their zoonotic potential was limited. Nevertheless, even though no cases of CWD transmission to human have been reported, the potential for human infection is still unclear and continued monitoring for zoonotic potential is warranted.

https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/31/2/24-0906_article

The detection and decontamination of chronic wasting disease prions during venison processing

Aims: There is a growing concern that chronic wasting disease (CWD) prions in venison pose a risk to human health. CWD prions accumulate in infected deer tissues that commonly enter the human food chain through meat processing and consumption. The United States (US) Food and Drug Administration and US Department of Agriculture now formally consider CWD-positive venison unfit for human and animal consumption. Yet, the degree to which prion contamination occurs during routine venison processing is unknown. Here, we use environmental surface swab methods to:

a) experimentally test meat processing equipment (i.e., stainless steel knives and polyethylene cutting boards) before and after processing CWD-positive venison and

b) test the efficacy of five different disinfectant types (i.e., Dawn dish soap, Virkon-S, Briotech, 10% bleach, and 40% bleach) to determine prion decontamination efficacy.

Materials and Methods: We used a real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC) assay to determine CWD infection status of venison and to detect CWD prions in the swabs. We collected three swabs per surface and ran eight technical replicates on RT-QuIC.

Results: CWD prions were detected on all cutting boards (n= 3; replicates= 8/8, 8/8, 8/8 and knives (n= 3; replicates= 8/8, 8/8, 8/8) used in processing CWD-positive venison, but not on those used for CWD-negative venison. After processing CWD-positive venison, allowing the surfaces to dry, and washing the cutting board with Dawn dish soap, we detected CWD prions on the cutting board surface (n= 3; replicates= 8/8, 8/8, 8/8) but not on the knife (n= 3, replicates = 0/8, 0/8, 0/8). Similar patterns were observed with Briotech (cutting board: n= 3; replicates= 7/8, 1/8, 0/8; knife: n= 3; replicates = 0/8, 0/8, 0/8). We did not detect CWD prions on the knives or cutting boards after disinfecting with Virkon-S, 10% bleach, and 40% bleach.

Conclusions: These preliminary results suggest that Dawn dish soap and Briotech do not reliably decontaminate CWD prions from these surfaces. Our data suggest that Virkon-S and various bleach concentrations are more effective in reducing prion contamination of meat processing surfaces; however, surface type may also influence the ability of prions to adsorb to surfaces, preventing complete decontamination. Our results will directly inform best practices to prevent the introduction of CWD prions into the human food chain during venison processing.

Prion 2023 Abstracts

https://prion2023.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Meeting-book-final-version2.pdf

DETECTION OF CHRONIC WASTING DISEASE PRIONS IN PROCESSED MEATS.

The zoonotic potential of chronic wasting disease (CWD) remains unknown. Currently, there are no known natural cases of CWD transmission to humans but increasing evidence suggests that the host range of CWD is not confined only to cervid species. Alarmingly, recent experimental evidence suggests that certain CWD isolates can induce disease in non-human primates. While the CDC strongly recommends determining CWD status in animals prior to consumption, this practice is voluntary. Consequently, it is plausible that a proportion of the cervid meat entering the human food chain may be contaminated with CWD. Of additional concern is that traditional diagnostic techniques used to detect CWD have relatively low sensitivity and are only approved for use in tissues other than those typically ingested by humans. In this study, we analyzed different processed meats derived from a pre-clinical, CWD-positive free-ranging elk. Products tested included filets, sausages, boneless steaks, burgers, ham steaks, seasoned chili meats, and spiced meats. CWD-prion presence in these products were assessed by PMCA using deer and elk substrates. Our results show positive prion detection in all products. To confirm the resilience of CWD-prions to traditional cooking methods, we grilled and boiled the meat products and evaluated them for any remnant PMCA seeding activity. Results confirmed the presence of CWD-prions in these meat products suggesting that infectious particles may still be available to people even after cooking. Our results strongly suggest ongoing human exposure to CWD-prions and raise significant concerns of zoonotic transmission through ingestion of CWD contaminated meat products.

***> Products tested included filets, sausages, boneless steaks, burgers, ham steaks, seasoned chili meats, and spiced meats.

***> CWD-prion presence in these products were assessed by PMCA using deer and elk substrates.

***> Our results show positive prion detection in all products.

***> Results confirmed the presence of CWD-prions in these meat products suggesting that infectious particles may still be available to people even after cooking.

***> Our results strongly suggest ongoing human exposure to CWD-prions and raise significant concerns of zoonotic transmission through ingestion of CWD contaminated meat products.

https://intcwdsympo.files.wordpress.com/2023/06/final-agenda-with-abstracts.pdf?force_download=true

Detection of chronic wasting disease prions in processed meats

Results: Our results show positive prion detection in all the samples analyzed using deer and elk substrates. Surprisingly, cooked meats displayed increased seeding activities. This data suggests that CWD-prions are available to people even after meats are processed and cooked.

Conclusions: These results suggest CWD prions are accessible to humans through meats, even after processing and cooking. Considering the fact that these samples were collected from already processed specimens, the availability of CWD prions to humans is probably underestimated.

"Our results show positive prion detection in all the samples analyzed using deer and elk substrates. Surprisingly, cooked meats displayed increased seeding activities."

https://prion2023.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Meeting-book-final-version2.pdf

Fortuitous generation of a zoonotic cervid prion strain

Aims: Whether CWD prions can infect humans remains unclear despite the very substantial scale and long history of human exposure of CWD in many states or provinces of USA and Canada. Multiple in vitro conversion experiments and in vivo animal studies indicate that the CWD-to-human transmission barrier is not unbreakable. A major long-term public health concern on CWD zoonosis is the emergence of highly zoonotic CWD strains. We aim to address the question of whether highly zoonotic CWD strains are possible.

Materials and Methods: We inoculated several sCJD brain samples into cervidized transgenic mice (Tg12), which were intended as negative controls for bioassays of brain tissues from sCJD cases who had potentially been exposed to CWD. Some of the Tg12mice became infected and their brain tissues were further examined by Western blot as well as serial passages in humanized or cervidized mice.

Results: Passage of sCJDMM1 in transgenic mice expressing elk PrP (Tg12) resulted in a “cervidized” CJD strain that we termed CJDElkPrP. We observed 100% transmission of the original CJDElkPrP in transgenic mice expressing human PrP. We passaged CJDElkPrP two more times in the Tg12mice. We found that such second and third passage CJDElkPrP prions retained 100% transmission rate in the humanized mice, despite that the natural elk CWD isolates and CJDElkPrP share the same elk PrP sequence. In contrast, we and others found zero or poor transmission of natural elk CWD isolates in humanized mice.

Conclusions: Our data indicate that highly zoonotic cervid prion strains are not only possible but also can retain zoonotic potential after serial passages in cervids, suggesting a very significant and serious long-term risk of CWD zoonosis given that the broad and continuing spread of CWD prions will provide fertile grounds for the emergence of zoonotic CWD strains over time.

https://prion2023.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Meeting-book-final-version2.pdf

Transmission of cervid prions to humanized mice demonstrates the zoonotic potential of CWD

Samia Hannaoui1 · Irina Zemlyankina1 · Sheng Chun Chang1 · Maria Immaculata Arifn1 · Vincent Béringue2 · Debbie McKenzie3 · Hermann M. Schatzl1 · Sabine Gilch1

Received: 24 May 2022 / Revised: 5 August 2022 / Accepted: 7 August 2022

© The Author(s) 2022

Abstract

Prions cause infectious and fatal neurodegenerative diseases in mammals. Chronic wasting disease (CWD), a prion disease of cervids, spreads efficiently among wild and farmed animals. Potential transmission to humans of CWD is a growing concern due to its increasing prevalence. Here, we provide evidence for a zoonotic potential of CWD prions, and its probable signature using mice expressing human prion protein (PrP) as an infection model. Inoculation of these mice with deer CWD isolates resulted in atypical clinical manifestation with prion seeding activity and efficient transmissible infectivity in the brain and, remarkably, in feces, but without classical neuropathological or Western blot appearances of prion diseases. Intriguingly, the protease-resistant PrP in the brain resembled that found in a familial human prion disease and was transmissible upon second passage. Our results suggest that CWD might infect humans, although the transmission barrier is likely higher compared to zoonotic transmission of cattle prions. Notably, our data suggest a different clinical presentation, prion signature, and tissue tropism, which causes challenges for detection by current diagnostic assays. Furthermore, the presence of infectious prions in feces is concerning because if this occurs in humans, it is a source for human-to-human transmission. These findings have strong implications for public health and CWD management.

Keywords Chronic wasting disease · CWD · Zoonotic potential · Prion strains · Zoonotic prions

HIGHLIGHTS OF THIS STUDY

================================

Our results suggest that CWD might infect humans, although the transmission barrier is likely higher compared to zoonotic transmission of cattle prions. Notably, our data suggest a different clinical presentation, prion signature, and tissue tropism, which causes challenges for detection by current diagnostic assays. Furthermore, the presence of infectious prions in feces is concerning because if this occurs in humans, it is a source for human-to-human transmission. These findings have strong implications for public health and CWD management.

In this study, we evaluated the zoonotic potential of CWD using a transgenic mouse model overexpressing human M129-PrPC (tg650 [12]). We inoculated tg650 mice intracerebrally with two deer CWD isolates, Wisc-1 and 116AG [22, 23, 27, 29]. We demonstrate that this transgenic line was susceptible to infection with CWD prions and displayed a distinct leading clinical sign, an atypical PrPSc signature and unusual fecal shedding of infectious prions. Importantly, these prions generated by the human PrP transgenic mice were transmissible upon passage. Our results are the first evidence of a zoonotic risk of CWD when using one of the most common CWD strains, Wisc-1/CWD1 for infection. We demonstrated in a human transgenic mouse model that the species barrier for transmission of CWD to humans is not absolute. The fact that its signature was not typical raises the questions whether CWD would manifest in humans as a subclinical infection, whether it would arise through direct or indirect transmission including an intermediate host, or a silent to uncovered human-to-human transmission, and whether current detection techniques will be suffcient to unveil its presence.

Our findings strongly suggest that CWD should be regarded as an actual public health risk. Here, we use humanized mice to show that CWD prions can cross the species barrier to humans, and remarkably, infectious prions can be excreted in feces.

Our results indicate that if CWD crosses the species-barrier to humans, it is unlikely to resemble the most common forms of human prion diseases with respect to clinical signs, tissue tropism and PrPSc signature. For instance, PrPSc in variable protease-sensitive prionopathy (VPSPr), a sporadic form of human prion disease, and in the genetic form Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker syndrome (GSS) is defined by an atypical PK-resistant PrPSc fragment that is non-glycosylated and truncated at both C- and N-termini, with a molecular weight between 6 and 8 kDa [24, 44–46]. These biochemical features are unique and distinctive from PrPSc (PrP27-30) found in most other human or animal prion disease. The atypical PrPSc signature detected in brain homogenate of tg650 mice #321 (1st passage) and #3063 (2nd passage), and the 7–8 kDa fragment (Figs. 2, 4) are very similar to that of GSS, both in terms of migration profile and the N-terminal cleavage site.

CWD in humans might remain subclinical but with PrPSc deposits in the brain with an unusual morphology that does not resemble the patterns usually seen in different prion diseases (e.g., mouse #328; Fig. 3), clinical with untraceable abnormal PrP (e.g., mouse #327) but still transmissible and uncovered upon subsequent passage (e.g., mouse #3063; Fig. 4), or prions have other reservoirs than the usual ones, hence the presence of infectivity in feces (e.g., mouse #327) suggesting a potential for human-to-human transmission and a real iatrogenic risk that might be unrecognizable.

“suggesting a potential for human-to-human transmission and a real iatrogenic risk that might be unrecognizable.”

=================================

Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at

https://doi.org/10.1007/s00401-022-02482-9

snip...see full text;

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00401-022-02482-9

https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s00401-022-02482-9.pdf

Macaque tissues to rodent models demonstrates the zoonotic potential of chronic wasting disease.

Samia Hannaoui1,2, Ginny Cheng1,2, Wiebke Wemheuer3, Walter Schulz-Schaeffer3, Sabine Gilch1,2, Hermann Schatzl1,2 1University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada. 2Calgary Prion Research Unit, Calgary, Canada. 3Institute of Neuropathology, Medical Faculty, Saarland University, Homburg/Saar, Germany

Snip…

***> Further passage to cervidized mice revealed transmission with a 100% attack rate.

***> Our findings demonstrate that macaques, considered the best model for the zoonotic potential of prions, were infected upon CWD challenge, including the oral one.

****> The disease manifested as atypical in macaques and initial transgenic mouse transmissions, but with infectivity present at all times, as unveiled in the bank vole model with an unusual tissue tropism.

***> Epidemiologic surveillance of prion disease among cervid hunters and people likely to have consumed venison contaminated with chronic wasting disease

=====

https://intcwdsympo.files.wordpress.com/2023/06/final-agenda-with-abstracts.pdf?force_download=true

Transmission of Cervid Prions to Humanized Mice Demonstrates the Zoonotic Potential of CWD

Samia Hannaouia, Irina Zemlyankinaa, Sheng Chun Changa, Maria Immaculata Arifina, Vincent Béringueb, Debbie McKenziec, Hermann M. Schatzla, and Sabine Gilcha

Results: Here, we provide the strongest evidence supporting the zoonotic potential of CWD prions, and their possible phenotype in humans. Inoculation of mice expressing human PrPCwith deer CWD isolates (strains Wisc-1 and 116AG) resulted in atypical clinical manifestations in > 75% of the mice, with myoclonus as leading clinical sign. Most of tg650brain homogenates were positive for seeding activity in RT-QuIC. Clinical disease and presentation was transmissible to tg650 mice and bank voles. Intriguingly, protease-resistant PrP in the brain of tg650 mice resembled that found in a familial human prion disease and was transmissible upon passage. Abnormal PrP aggregates upon infection with Wisc-1 were detectable in thalamus, hypothalamus, and midbrain/pons regions.

Unprecedented in human prion disease, feces of CWD-inoculated tg650 mice harbored prion seeding activity and infectious prions, as shown by inoculation of bank voles and tg650 with fecal homogenates.

Conclusions: This is the first evidence that CWD can infect humans and cause disease with a distinctive clinical presentation, signature, and tropism, which might be transmissible between humans while current diagnostic assays might fail to detect it. These findings have major implications for public health and CWD-management.

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/19336896.2022.2091286

Volume 31, Number 1—January 2025

Dispatch

Detection of Prions in Wild Pigs (Sus scrofa) from Areas with Reported Chronic Wasting Disease Cases, United States

Abstract

Using a prion amplification assay, we identified prions in tissues from wild pigs (Sus scrofa) living in areas of the United States with variable chronic wasting disease (CWD) epidemiology. Our findings indicate that scavenging swine could play a role in disseminating CWD and could therefore influence its epidemiology, geographic distribution, and interspecies spread.

Snip…

Conclusions In summary, results from this study showed that wild pigs are exposed to cervid prions, although the pigs seem to display some resistance to infection via natural exposure. Future studies should address the susceptibility of this invasive animal species to the multiple prion strains circulating in the environment. Nonetheless, identification of CWD prions in wild pig tissues indicated the potential for pigs to move prions across the landscape, which may, in turn, influence the epidemiology and geographic spread of CWD.

https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/%2031/1/24-0401_article

Although the current U.S. feed ban is based on keeping tissues from TSE infected cattle from contaminating animal feed, swine rations in the U.S. could contain animal derived components including materials from scrapie infected sheep and goats. These results indicating the susceptibility of pigs to sheep scrapie, coupled with the limitations of the current feed ban, indicates that a revision of the feed ban may be necessary to protect swine production and potentially human health.

2. Determined that pigs naturally exposed to chronic wasting disease (CWD) may act as a reservoir of CWD infectivity. Chronic wasting disease is a naturally occurring, fatal, neurodegenerative disease of cervids. The potential for swine to serve as a host for the agent of CWD disease is unknown. The purpose of this study was to investigate the susceptibility of swine to the CWD agent following experimental oral or intracranial inoculation. Pigs were assigned to 1 of 3 groups: intracranially inoculated; orally inoculated; or non-inoculated. At market weight age, half of the pigs in each group were tested ('market weight' groups). The remaining pigs ('aged' groups) were allowed to incubate for up to 73 months post inoculation (MPI). Tissues collected at necropsy were examined for disease-associated prion protein (PrPSc) by multiple diagnostic methods. Brain samples from selected pigs were bioassayed in mice expressing porcine prion protein. Some pigs from each inoculated group were positive by one or more tests. Bioassay was positive in 4 out of 5 pigs assayed. Although only small amounts of PrPSc were detected using sensitive methods, this study demonstrates that pigs can serve as hosts for CWD. Detection of infectivity in orally inoculated pigs using mouse bioassay raises the possibility that naturally exposed pigs could act as a reservoir of CWD infectivity. Currently, swine rations in the U.S. could contain animal derived components including materials from deer or elk. In addition, feral swine could be exposed to infected carcasses in areas where CWD is present in wildlife populations. The current feed ban in the U.S. is based exclusively on keeping tissues from TSE infected cattle from entering animal feeds. These results indicating the susceptibility of pigs to CWD, coupled with the limitations of the current feed ban, indicates that a revision of the feed ban may be necessary to protect swine production and potentially human health.

The agent of chronic wasting disease from pigs is infectious in transgenic mice expressing human PRNP

https://www.ars.usda.gov/research/publications/publication/?seqNo115=353091

Currently, swine rations in the U.S. could contain animal derived components including materials from deer or elk. In addition, feral swine could be exposed to infected carcasses in areas where CWD is present in wildlife populations. The current feed ban in the U.S. is based exclusively on keeping tissues from TSE infected cattle from entering animal feeds. These results indicating the susceptibility of pigs to CWD, coupled with the limitations of the current feed ban, indicates that a revision of the feed ban may be necessary to protect swine production and potentially human health.

https://www.ars.usda.gov/research/project/?accnNo=432011&fy=2017

Conclusions: This study demonstrates that PrPSc accumulates in lymphoid tissues from pigs challenged intracranially or orally with the CWD agent, and can be detected as early as 4 months after challenge. CWD-infected pigs rarely develop clinical disease and if they do, they do so after a long incubation period. This raises the possibility that CWD-infected pigs could shed prions into their environment long before they develop clinical disease. Furthermore, lymphoid tissues from CWD-infected pigs could present a potential source of CWD infectivity in the animal and human food chains.

https://www.ars.usda.gov/research/publications/publication/?seqNo115=337105

This study demonstrates that pigs can serve as potential hosts for CWD, although with low attack rates and scant PrPcwd accumulation. Detection of infectivity in orally challenged pigs using mouse bioassay raises the possibility that naturally exposed pigs act as a reservoir of CWD infectivity, even though affected pigs do not develop overt clinical signs or readily detectable PrPcwd.

https://www.ars.usda.gov/research/publications/publication/?seqNo115=326166

CONFIDENTIAL

EXPERIMENTAL PORCINE SPONGIFORM ENCEPHALOPATHY

LINE TO TAKE

3. If questions on pharmaceuticals are raised at the Press conference, the suggested line to take is as follows:-

"There are no medicinal products licensed for use on the market which make use of UK-derived porcine tissues with which any hypothetical “high risk" ‘might be associated. The results of the recent experimental work at the CSM will be carefully examined by the CSM‘s Working Group on spongiform encephalopathy at its next meeting.

DO Hagger RM 1533 MT Ext 3201

http://web.archive.org/web/20030822054419/www.bseinquiry.gov.uk/files/yb/1990/09/21009001.pdf

While this clearly is a cause for concern we should not jump to the conclusion that this means that pigs will necessarily be infected by bone and meat meal fed by the oral route as is the case with cattle. ...

http://web.archive.org/web/20031026000118/www.bseinquiry.gov.uk/files/yb/1990/08/23004001.pdf

we cannot rule out the possibility that unrecognised subclinical spongiform encephalopathy could be present in British pigs though there is no evidence for this: only with parenteral/implantable pharmaceuticals/devices is the theoretical risk to humans of sufficient concern to consider any action.

http://web.archive.org/web/20030822031154/www.bseinquiry.gov.uk/files/yb/1990/09/10007001.pdf

May I, at the outset, reiterate that we should avoid dissemination of papers relating to this experimental finding to prevent premature release of the information. ...

http://web.archive.org/web/20030822052332/www.bseinquiry.gov.uk/files/yb/1990/09/11005001.pdf

3. It is particularly important that this information is not passed outside the Department, until Ministers have decided how they wish it to be handled. ...

http://web.archive.org/web/20030822052438/www.bseinquiry.gov.uk/files/yb/1990/09/12002001.pdf

But it would be easier for us if pharmaceuticals/devices are not directly mentioned at all. ...

http://web.archive.org/web/20030518170213/www.bseinquiry.gov.uk/files/yb/1990/09/13004001.pdf

Our records show that while some use is made of porcine materials in medicinal products, the only products which would appear to be in a hypothetically ''higher risk'' area are the adrenocorticotrophic hormone for which the source material comes from outside the United Kingdom, namely America China Sweden France and Germany. The products are manufactured by Ferring and Armour. A further product, ''Zenoderm Corium implant'' manufactured by Ethicon, makes use of porcine skin - which is not considered to be a ''high risk'' tissue, but one of its uses is described in the data sheet as ''in dural replacement''. This product is sourced from the United Kingdom.....

http://web.archive.org/web/20030822054419/www.bseinquiry.gov.uk/files/yb/1990/09/21009001.pdf

Monday, November 13, 2023

Food and Drug Administration's BSE Feed Regulation (21 CFR 589.2000) Singeltary Another Request for Update 2023 Food and Drug Administration's BSE Feed Regulation (21 CFR 589.2000) Singeltary Another Request for Update 2023

The infamous 1997 mad cow feed ban i.e. Food and Drug Administration's BSE Feed Regulation (21 CFR 589.2000) most material (exceptions include milk, tallow, and gelatin) from deer and elk is prohibited for use in feed for ruminant animals. With regards to feed for non-ruminant animals, under FDA law, CWD positive deer may not be used for any animal feed or feed ingredients. For elk and deer considered at high risk for CWD, the FDA recommends that these animals do not enter the animal feed system. However, this recommendation is guidance and not a requirement by law.

***>However, this recommendation is guidance and not a requirement by law.

WITH GREAT URGENCY, THE Food and Drug Administration's BSE Feed Regulation (21 CFR 589.2000) MUST BE ENHANCED AND UPDATED TO INCLUDE CERVID, PIGS, AND SHEEP, SINCE RECENT SCIENCE AND TRANSMISSION STUDIES ALL, INCLUDING CATTLE, HAVE SHOWN ORAL TSE PrP TRANSMISSIONS BETWEEN THE SPECIES, AND THIS SHOULD BE DONE WITH THE UTMOST URGENCY, REASONS AS FOLLOW.

First off I will start with a single BSE feed breach 10 years after 1997 partial ban. If you got to the archived link, all the way down to bottom…THE NEXT YEAR I RECALL ONE WITH 10,000,000+ banned products recall…see this records at the bottom…terry

REASON The feed was manufactured from materials that may have been contaminated with mammalian protein.

VOLUME OF PRODUCT IN COMMERCE 27,694,240 lbs DISTRIBUTION MI

snip..... end

***>However, this recommendation is guidance and not a requirement by law.

THIS MUST CHANGE ASAP!

“For elk and deer considered at high risk for CWD, the FDA recommends that these animals do not enter the animal feed system. However, this recommendation is guidance and not a requirement by law.”

Friday, December 14, 2012

DEFRA U.K. What is the risk of Chronic Wasting Disease CWD being introduced into Great Britain? A Qualitative Risk Assessment October 2012

snip.....

In the USA, under the Food and Drug Administration's BSE Feed Regulation (21 CFR 589.2000) most material (exceptions include milk, tallow, and gelatin) from deer and elk is prohibited for use in feed for ruminant animals. With regards to feed for non-ruminant animals, under FDA law, CWD positive deer may not be used for any animal feed or feed ingredients. For elk and deer considered at high risk for CWD, the FDA recommends that these animals do not enter the animal feed system. However, this recommendation is guidance and not a requirement by law. Animals considered at high risk for CWD include:

1) animals from areas declared to be endemic for CWD and/or to be CWD eradication zones and

2) deer and elk that at some time during the 60-month period prior to slaughter were in a captive herd that contained a CWD-positive animal.

Therefore, in the USA, materials from cervids other than CWD positive animals may be used in animal feed and feed ingredients for non-ruminants.

The amount of animal PAP that is of deer and/or elk origin imported from the USA to GB can not be determined, however, as it is not specified in TRACES.

It may constitute a small percentage of the 8412 kilos of non-fish origin processed animal proteins that were imported from US into GB in 2011.

Overall, therefore, it is considered there is a __greater than negligible risk___ that (nonruminant) animal feed and pet food containing deer and/or elk protein is imported into GB.

There is uncertainty associated with this estimate given the lack of data on the amount of deer and/or elk protein possibly being imported in these products.

snip.....

https://web.archive.org/web/20170404125557/http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20130822084033/http://www.defra.gov.uk/animal-diseases/files/qra_chronic-wasting-disease-121029.pdf

PLoS One. 2020 Aug 20;15(8):e0237410. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0237410. eCollection 2020.

Very low oral exposure to prions of brain or saliva origin can transmit chronic wasting disease

Nathaniel D Denkers 1 , Clare E Hoover 2 , Kristen A Davenport 3 , Davin M Henderson 1 , Erin E McNulty 1 , Amy V Nalls 1 , Candace K Mathiason 1 , Edward A Hoover 1

PMID: 32817706 PMCID: PMC7446902 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0237410

Abstract

The minimum infectious dose required to induce CWD infection in cervids remains unknown, as does whether peripherally shed prions and/or multiple low dose exposures are important factors in CWD transmission. With the goal of better understand CWD infection in nature, we studied oral exposures of deer to very low doses of CWD prions and also examined whether the frequency of exposure or prion source may influence infection and pathogenesis. We orally inoculated white-tailed deer with either single or multiple divided doses of prions of brain or saliva origin and monitored infection by serial longitudinal tissue biopsies spanning over two years. We report that oral exposure to as little as 300 nanograms (ng) of CWD-positive brain or to saliva containing seeding activity equivalent to 300 ng of CWD-positive brain, were sufficient to transmit CWD disease. This was true whether the inoculum was administered as a single bolus or divided as three weekly 100 ng exposures. However, when the 300 ng total dose was apportioned as 10, 30 ng doses delivered over 12 weeks, no infection occurred. While low-dose exposures to prions of brain or saliva origin prolonged the time from inoculation to first detection of infection, once infection was established, we observed no differences in disease pathogenesis. These studies suggest that the CWD minimum infectious dose approximates 100 to 300 ng CWD-positive brain (or saliva equivalent), and that CWD infection appears to conform more with a threshold than a cumulative dose dynamic.

Snip…

Discussion

As CWD expands across North America and Scandinavia, how this disease is transmitted so efficiently remains unclear, given the low concentrations of prions shed in secretions and excretions [13, 14]. The present studies demonstrated that a single oral exposure to as little as 300nmg of CWD-positive brain or equivalent saliva can initiate infection in 100% of exposed white-tailed deer. However, distributing this dose as 10, 30 ng exposures failed to induce infection. Overall, these results suggest that the minimum oral infectious exposure approaches 100 to 300 ng of CWD-positive brain equivalent. These dynamics also invite speculation as to whether potential infection co-factors, such as particle binding [46, 47] or compromises in mucosal integrity may influence infection susceptibility, as suggested from two studies in rodent models [48, 49].

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0237410

PRION 2023 CONTINUED;

https://prion2023.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Meeting-book-final-version2.pdf

Prion 2023 Experimental Oronasal Inoculation of the Chronic Wasting Disease Agent into White Tailed Deer

Author list: Sarah Zurbuchena,b , S. Jo Moorea,b , Jifeng Biana , Eric D. Cassmanna , and Justin J. Greenleea . a. Virus and Prion Research Unit, National Animal Disease Center, ARS, United States Department of Agriculture, Ames, IA, US b. Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education (ORISE), U.S. Department of Energy, Oak Ridge, TN, United States

Aims: The purpose of this experiment was to determine whether white-tailed deer (WTD) are susceptible to inoculation of chronic wasting disease (CWD) via oronasal exposure.

Materials and methods: Six male, neutered WTD were oronasally inoculated with brainstem material (10% w/v) from a CWD-positive wild-type WTD. The genotypes of five inoculated deer were Q95/G96 (wild-type). One inoculated deer was homozygous S at codon 96 (96SS). Cervidized (Tg12; M132 elk PrP) mice were inoculated with 1% w/v brainstem homogenate from either a 96GG WTD (n=10) or the 96SS WTD (n=10).

Results: All deer developed characteristic clinical signs of CWD including weight loss, regurgitation, and ataxia. The 96SS individual had a prolonged disease course and incubation period compared to the other deer. Western blots of the brainstem on all deer yielded similar molecular profiles. All deer had widespread lymphoid distribution of PrPCWD and neuropathologic lesions associated with transmissible spongiform encephalopathies. Both groups of mice had a 100% attack rate and developed clinical signs, including loss of body condition, ataxia, and loss of righting reflex. Mice inoculated with material from the 96SS deer had a significantly shorter incubation period than mice inoculated with material from 96GG deer (Welch two sample T-test, P<0.05). Serial dilutions of each inocula suggests that differences in incubation period were not due to a greater concentration of PrPCWD in the 96SS inoculum. Molecular profiles from western blot of brain homogenates from mice appeared similar regardless of inoculum and appear similar to those of deer used for inoculum.

Conclusions: This study characterizes the lesions and clinical course of CWD in WTD inoculated in a similar manner to natural conditions. It supports previous findings that 96SS deer have a prolonged disease course. Further, it describes a first pass of inoculum from a 96SS deer in cervidized mice which shortened the incubation period.

Funded by: This research was funded in its entirety by congressionally appropriated funds to the United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service. The funders of the work did not influence study design, data collection, analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

Acknowledgement: We thank Ami Frank and Kevin Hassall for their technical contributions to this project.

=====end

PRION 2023 CONTINUED;

https://prion2023.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Meeting-book-final-version2.pdf

***> Price of TSE Prion Poker goes up substantially, all you cattle ranchers and such, better pay close attention here...terry <***

Transmission of the chronic wasting disease agent from elk to cattle after oronasal exposure

Justin Greenlee, Jifeng Bian, Zoe Lambert, Alexis Frese, and Eric Cassmann Virus and Prion Research Unit, National Animal Disease Center, USDA-ARS, Ames, IA, USA

Aims: The purpose of this study was to determine the susceptibility of cattle to chronic wasting disease agent from elk.

Materials and Methods: Initial studies were conducted in bovinized mice using inoculum derived from elk with various genotypes at codon 132 (MM, LM, LL). Based upon attack rates, inoculum (10% w/v brain homogenate) from an LM132 elk was selected for transmission studies in cattle. At approximately 2 weeks of age, one wild type steer (EE211) and one steer with the E211K polymorphism (EK211) were fed 1 mL of brain homogenate in a quart of milk replacer while another 1 mL was instilled intranasally. The cattle were examined daily for clinical signs for the duration of the experiment. One steer is still under observation at 71 months post-inoculation (mpi).

Results: Inoculum derived from MM132 elk resulted in similar attack rates and incubation periods in mice expressing wild type or K211 bovine PRNP, 35% at 531 days post inoculation (dpi) and 27% at 448 dpi, respectively. Inoculum from LM132 elk had a slightly higher attack rates in mice: 45% (693 dpi) in wild type cattle PRNP and 33% (468) in K211 mice. Inoculum from LL132 elk resulted in the highest attack rate in wild type bovinized mice (53% at 625 dpi), but no K211 mice were affected at >700 days. At approximately 70 mpi, the EK211 genotype steer developed clinical signs suggestive of prion disease, depression, low head carriage, hypersalivation, and ataxia, and was necropsied. Enzyme immunoassay (IDEXX) was positive in brainstem (OD=4.00, but non-detect in retropharyngeal lymph nodes and palatine tonsil. Immunoreactivity was largely limited to the brainstem, midbrain, and cervical spinal cord with a pattern that was primarily glia-associated.

Conclusions: Cattle with the E211K polymorphism are susceptible to the CWD agent after oronasal exposure of 0.2 g of infectious material.

Funded by: This research was funded in its entirety by congressionally appropriated funds to the United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service. The funders of the work did not influence study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

*****>>> "Cattle with the E211K polymorphism are susceptible to the CWD agent after oronasal exposure of 0.2 g of infectious material." <<<*****

=====end

Strain characterization of chronic wasting disease in bovine-PrP transgenic mice

Nuria Jerez-Garrido1, Sara Canoyra1, Natalia Fernández-Borges1, Alba Marín Moreno1, Sylvie L. Benestad2, Olivier Andreoletti3, Gordon Mitchell4, Aru Balachandran4, Juan María Torres1 and Juan Carlos Espinosa1. 1 Centro de Investigación en Sanidad Animal, CISA-INIA-CSIC, Madrid, Spain. 2 Norwegian Veterinary Institute, Ås, Norway. 3 UMR Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)/École Nationale Vétérinaire de Toulouse (ENVT), Interactions Hôtes Agents Pathogènes, Toulouse, France. 4 Canadian Food Inspection Agency, Ottawa, Canada.

Aims: Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is an infectious prion disease that affects cervids. Various CWD prion strains have been identified in different cervid species from North America and Europe. The properties of the infectious prion strains are influenced by amino acid changes and polymorphisms in the PrP sequences of different cervid species. This study, aimed to assess the ability of a panel of CWD prion isolates from diverse cervid species from North America and Europe to infect bovine species, as well as to investigate the properties of the prion strains following the adaptation to the bovine-PrP context.

Materials and Methods: BoPrP-Tg110 mice overexpressing the bovine-PrP sequence were inoculated by intracranial route with a panel of CWD prion isolates from both North America (two white-tailed deer and two elk) and Europe (one reindeer, one moose and one red deer).

Results: Our results show distinct behaviours in the transmission of the CWD isolates to the BoPrP-Tg110 mouse model. Some of these isolates did not transmit even after the second passage. Those able to transmit displayed differences in terms of attack rate, survival times, biochemical properties of brain PrPres, and histopathology.

Conclusions: Altogether, these results exhibit the diversity of CWD strains present in the panel of CWD isolates and the ability of at least some CWD isolates to infect bovine species. Cattle being one of the most important farming species, this ability represents a potential threat to both animal and human health, and consequently deserves further study.

Funded by: MCIN/AEI /10.13039/501100011033 and by European Union NextGeneration EU/PRTR

Grant number: PCI2020-120680-2 ICRAD

"Altogether, these results exhibit the diversity of CWD strains present in the panel of CWD isolates and the ability of at least some CWD isolates to infect bovine species. Cattle being one of the most important farming species, this ability represents a potential threat to both animal and human health, and consequently deserves further study."

=====end

https://prion2023.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Meeting-book-final-version2.pdf

Although the current U.S. feed ban is based on keeping tissues from TSE infected cattle from contaminating animal feed, swine rations in the U.S. could contain animal derived components including materials from scrapie infected sheep and goats. These results indicating the susceptibility of pigs to sheep scrapie, coupled with the limitations of the current feed ban, indicates that a revision of the feed ban may be necessary to protect swine production and potentially human health.

2. Determined that pigs naturally exposed to chronic wasting disease (CWD) may act as a reservoir of CWD infectivity. Chronic wasting disease is a naturally occurring, fatal, neurodegenerative disease of cervids. The potential for swine to serve as a host for the agent of CWD disease is unknown. The purpose of this study was to investigate the susceptibility of swine to the CWD agent following experimental oral or intracranial inoculation. Pigs were assigned to 1 of 3 groups: intracranially inoculated; orally inoculated; or non-inoculated. At market weight age, half of the pigs in each group were tested ('market weight' groups). The remaining pigs ('aged' groups) were allowed to incubate for up to 73 months post inoculation (MPI). Tissues collected at necropsy were examined for disease-associated prion protein (PrPSc) by multiple diagnostic methods. Brain samples from selected pigs were bioassayed in mice expressing porcine prion protein. Some pigs from each inoculated group were positive by one or more tests. Bioassay was positive in 4 out of 5 pigs assayed. Although only small amounts of PrPSc were detected using sensitive methods, this study demonstrates that pigs can serve as hosts for CWD. Detection of infectivity in orally inoculated pigs using mouse bioassay raises the possibility that naturally exposed pigs could act as a reservoir of CWD infectivity. Currently, swine rations in the U.S. could contain animal derived components including materials from deer or elk. In addition, feral swine could be exposed to infected carcasses in areas where CWD is present in wildlife populations. The current feed ban in the U.S. is based exclusively on keeping tissues from TSE infected cattle from entering animal feeds. These results indicating the susceptibility of pigs to CWD, coupled with the limitations of the current feed ban, indicates that a revision of the feed ban may be necessary to protect swine production and potentially human health.

The agent of chronic wasting disease from pigs is infectious in transgenic mice expressing human PRNP

https://www.ars.usda.gov/research/publications/publication/?seqNo115=353091

Currently, swine rations in the U.S. could contain animal derived components including materials from deer or elk. In addition, feral swine could be exposed to infected carcasses in areas where CWD is present in wildlife populations. The current feed ban in the U.S. is based exclusively on keeping tissues from TSE infected cattle from entering animal feeds. These results indicating the susceptibility of pigs to CWD, coupled with the limitations of the current feed ban, indicates that a revision of the feed ban may be necessary to protect swine production and potentially human health.

https://www.ars.usda.gov/research/project/?accnNo=432011&fy=2017

Conclusions: This study demonstrates that PrPSc accumulates in lymphoid tissues from pigs challenged intracranially or orally with the CWD agent, and can be detected as early as 4 months after challenge. CWD-infected pigs rarely develop clinical disease and if they do, they do so after a long incubation period. This raises the possibility that CWD-infected pigs could shed prions into their environment long before they develop clinical disease. Furthermore, lymphoid tissues from CWD-infected pigs could present a potential source of CWD infectivity in the animal and human food chains.

https://www.ars.usda.gov/research/publications/publication/?seqNo115=337105

This study demonstrates that pigs can serve as potential hosts for CWD, although with low attack rates and scant PrPcwd accumulation. Detection of infectivity in orally challenged pigs using mouse bioassay raises the possibility that naturally exposed pigs act as a reservoir of CWD infectivity, even though affected pigs do not develop overt clinical signs or readily detectable PrPcwd.

https://www.ars.usda.gov/research/publications/publication/?seqNo115=326166

https://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/

18. Zoonotic potential of moose-derived chronic wasting disease prions after adaptation in intermediate species

Tomás Barrioa, Jean-Yves Doueta, Alvina Huora, Séverine Lugana, Naïma Arona, Hervé Cassarda, Sylvie L. Benestadb, Juan Carlos Espinosac, Juan María Torresc, Olivier Andréolettia

aUnité Mixte de Recherche de l’Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement 1225 Interactions Hôtes-Agents Pathogènes, École Nationale Vétérinaire de Toulouse, 31076 Toulouse, France; bNorwegian Veterinary Institute, P.O. Box 64, NO-1431 Ås, Norway; cCentro de Investigación en Sanidad Animal (CISA-INIA), 28130, Valdeolmos, Madrid, Spain

Aims: Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is an emerging prion disease in Europe. To date, cases have been reported in three Nordic countries and in several species, including reindeer (Rangifer tarandus), moose (Alces alces) and red deer (Cervus elaphus). Cumulating data suggest that the prion strains responsible for the European cases are distinct from those circulating in North America. The biological properties of CWD prions are still poorly documented, in particular their spillover and zoonotic capacities. In this study, we aimed at characterizing the interspecies transmission potential of Norwegian moose CWD isolates.

Materials and Methods: For that purpose, we performed experimental transmissions in a panel of transgenic models expressing the PrPC sequence of various species.

Results: On first passage, one moose isolate propagated in the ovine PrPC-expressing model (Tg338). After adaptation in this host, moose CWD prions were able to transmit in mice expressing either bovine or human PrPC with high efficacy.

Conclusions: These results suggest that CWD prions can acquire enhanced zoonotic properties following adaptation in an intermediate species.

Funding

Grant number: AAPG2020 EU-CWD, ICRAD2020 TCWDE, NRC2022 NorCWD

Acknowledgement

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/19336896.2024.2424058

“ After adaptation in this host, moose CWD prions were able to transmit in mice expressing either bovine or human PrPC with high efficacy.”

regular venison eating associated with a 9 FOLD INCREASE IN RISK OF CJD

Subject: Re: DEER SPONGIFORM ENCEPHALOPATHY SURVEY & HOUND STUDY

Date: Fri, 18 Oct 2002 23:12:22 +0100

From: Steve Dealler

Reply-To: Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy Organization: Netscape Online member

To: BSE-L@ …

######## Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy <BSE-L@UNI-KARLSRUHE.DE> #########

Dear Terry,

An excellent piece of review as this literature is desparately difficult to get back from Government sites.

What happened with the deer was that an association between deer meat eating and sporadic CJD was found in about 1993. The evidence was not great but did not disappear after several years of asking CJD cases what they had eaten. I think that the work into deer disease largely stopped because it was not helpful to the UK industry...and no specific cases were reported.

Well, if you dont look adequately like they are in USA currenly then you wont find any!

Steve Dealler

########### http://mailhost.rz.uni-karlsruhe.de/warc/bse-l.html ############

Subject: DEER SPONGIFORM ENCEPHALOPATHY SURVEY & HOUND STUDY

From: "Terry S. Singeltary Sr." <flounder@WT.NET>

Reply To: Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy <BSE-L@UNI-KARLSRUHE.DE>

Date: Thu, 17 Oct 2002 17:04:51 -0700

snip...

''The association between venison eating and risk of CJD shows similar pattern, with regular venison eating associated with a 9 FOLD INCREASE IN RISK OF CJD (p = 0.04).''

CREUTZFELDT JAKOB DISEASE SURVEILLANCE IN THE UNITED KINGDOM THIRD ANNUAL REPORT AUGUST 1994

Consumption of venison and veal was much less widespread among both cases and controls. For both of these meats there was evidence of a trend with increasing frequency of consumption being associated with increasing risk of CJD. (not nvCJD, but sporadic CJD...tss) These associations were largely unchanged when attention was restricted to pairs with data obtained from relatives. ...

Table 9 presents the results of an analysis of these data.

There is STRONG evidence of an association between ‘’regular’’ veal eating and risk of CJD (p = .0.01).

Individuals reported to eat veal on average at least once a year appear to be at 13 TIMES THE RISK of individuals who have never eaten veal.

There is, however, a very wide confidence interval around this estimate. There is no strong evidence that eating veal less than once per year is associated with increased risk of CJD (p = 0.51).

The association between venison eating and risk of CJD shows similar pattern, with regular venison eating associated with a 9 FOLD INCREASE IN RISK OF CJD (p = 0.04).

There is some evidence that risk of CJD INCREASES WITH INCREASING FREQUENCY OF LAMB EATING (p = 0.02).

The evidence for such an association between beef eating and CJD is weaker (p = 0.14). When only controls for whom a relative was interviewed are included, this evidence becomes a little STRONGER (p = 0.08).

snip...

It was found that when veal was included in the model with another exposure, the association between veal and CJD remained statistically significant (p = < 0.05 for all exposures), while the other exposures ceased to be statistically significant (p = > 0.05).

snip...

In conclusion, an analysis of dietary histories revealed statistical associations between various meats/animal products and INCREASED RISK OF CJD. When some account was taken of possible confounding, the association between VEAL EATING AND RISK OF CJD EMERGED AS THE STRONGEST OF THESE ASSOCIATIONS STATISTICALLY. ...

snip...

In the study in the USA, a range of foodstuffs were associated with an increased risk of CJD, including liver consumption which was associated with an apparent SIX-FOLD INCREASE IN THE RISK OF CJD. By comparing the data from 3 studies in relation to this particular dietary factor, the risk of liver consumption became non-significant with an odds ratio of 1.2 (PERSONAL COMMUNICATION, PROFESSOR A. HOFMAN. ERASMUS UNIVERSITY, ROTTERDAM). (???...TSS)

snip...see full report ;

http://web.archive.org/web/20090506050043/http://www.bseinquiry.gov.uk/files/yb/1994/08/00004001.pdf

http://web.archive.org/web/20090506050007/http://www.bseinquiry.gov.uk/files/yb/1994/10/00003001.pdf

http://web.archive.org/web/20090506050244/http://www.bseinquiry.gov.uk/files/yb/1994/07/00001001.pdf

Stephen Dealler is a consultant medical microbiologist deal@airtime.co.uk

BSE Inquiry Steve Dealler

Management In Confidence

BSE: Private Submission of Bovine Brain Dealler

snip...end

########### http://mailhost.rz.uni-karlsruhe.de/warc/bse-l.html ############

BSE INQUIRY

CJD9/10022

October 1994

Mr R.N. Elmhirst Chairman British Deer Farmers Association Holly Lodge Spencers Lane

BerksWell Coventry CV7 7BZ

Dear Mr Elmhirst,

CREUTZFELDT-JAKOB DISEASE (CJD) SURVEILLANCE UNIT REPORT

Thank you for your recent letter concerning the publication of the third annual report from the CJD Surveillance Unit. I am sorry that you are dissatisfied with the way in which this report was published.

The Surveillance Unit is a completely independant outside body and the Department of Health is committed to publishing their reports as soon as they become available. In the circumstances it is not the practice to circulate the report for comment since the findings of the report would not be amended.. In future we can ensure that the British Deer Farmers Association receives a copy of the report in advance of publication.

The Chief Medical Officer has undertaken to keep the public fully informed of the results of any research in respect of CJD. This report was entirely the work of the unit and was produced completely independantly of the the Department.

The statistical results reqarding the consumption of venison was put into perspective in the body of the report and was not mentioned at all in the press release. Media attention regarding this report was low key but gave a realistic presentation of the statistical findings of the Unit. This approach to publication was successful in that consumption of venison was highlighted only once by the media ie. in the News at one television proqramme.

I believe that a further statement about the report, or indeed statistical links between CJD and consumption of venison, would increase, and quite possibly give damaging credence, to the whole issue. From the low key media reports of which I am aware it seems unlikely that venison consumption will suffer adversely, if at all.

http://web.archive.org/web/20030511010117/http://www.bseinquiry.gov.uk/files/yb/1994/10/00003001.pdf

TSE in wild UK deer? The first case of BSE (as we now realise) was in a nyala in London zoo and the further zoo cases in ungulates were simply thought of as being interesting transmissions of scrapie initially. The big problem started to appear with animals in 1993-5 when it became clear that there was an increase in the CJD cases in people that had eaten deer although the statistics involved must have been questionable. The reason for this was that the CJD Surveillance was well funded to look into the diet of people dying of CJD. This effect is not clear with vCJD...if only because the numbers involved are much smaller and hence it is difficult to gain enough statistics. They found that many other foods did not appear to have much association at all but that deer certainly did and as years went by the association actually became clearer. The appearance of vCJD in 1996 made all this much more difficult in that it was suddenly clearer that the cases of sporadic CJD that they had been checking up until then probably had nothing to do with beef...and the study decreased. During the period there was an increasing worry that deer were involved with CJD..

see references:

DEER BRAIN SURVEY

https://web.archive.org/web/20090506025229/http://www.bseinquiry.gov.uk/files/yb/1991/11/20004001.pdf

CONFIDENTIAL AND IN CONFIDENCE TRANSMISSION TO CHIMPANZEES AND PIGS

IN CONFIDENCE

TRANSMISSION TO CHIMPANZEES

Kuru and CJD have been successfully transmitted to chimpanzees but scrapie and TME have not.

We cannot say that scrapie will not transmit to chimpanzees. There are several scrapie strains and I am not aware that all have been tried (that would have to be from mouse passaged material). Nor has a wide enough range of field isolates subsequently strain typed in mice been inoculated by the appropriate routes (i/c, i/p and i/v).

I believe the proposed experiment to determine transmissibility, if conducted, would only show the susceptibility or resistance of the chimpanzee to infection/disease by the routes used and the result could not be interpreted for the predictability of the susceptibility for man. proposals for prolonged oral exposure of chimpanzees to milk from cattle were suggested a long while ago and rejected.

In view of Dr Gibbs' probable use of chimpazees Mr Wells' comments (enclosed) are pertinent. I have yet to receive a direct communication from Dr Schellekers but before any collaboration or provision of material we should identify the Gibbs' proposals and objectives.

A positive result from a chimpanzee challenged severely would likely create alarm in some circles even if the result could not be interpreted for man. I have a view that all these agents could be transmitted provided a large enough dose by appropriate routes was given and the animals kept long enough. Until the mechanisms of the species barrier are more clearly understood it might be best to retain that hypothesis.

A negative result would take a lifetime to determine but that would be a shorter period than might be available for human exposure and it would still not answer the question regarding mans ‘susceptibility. In the meantime no doubt the negativity would be used defensively. It would however be counterproductive if the experiment finally became positive. We may learn more about public reactions following next Monday's meeting.

R Bradley

CVO (+ Mr Wells’ commenters 23 September 1990 Dr T W A Little Dr B J Shreeve

90/9.23/1.1

https://web.archive.org/web/20090506041740/http://www.bseinquiry.gov.uk/files/yb/1990/09/23001001.pdf

*** now, let’s see what the authors said about this casual link, personal communications years ago, and then the latest on the zoonotic potential from CWD to humans from the TOKYO PRION 2016 CONFERENCE.

see where it is stated NO STRONG evidence. so, does this mean there IS casual evidence ????

“Our conclusion stating that we found no strong evidence of CWD transmission to humans”

From: TSS Subject: CWD aka MAD DEER/ELK TO HUMANS ???

Date: September 30, 2002 at 7:06 am PST

From: "Belay, Ermias"

To: Cc: "Race, Richard (NIH)" ; ; "Belay, Ermias"

Sent: Monday, September 30, 2002 9:22 AM

Subject: RE: TO CDC AND NIH - PUB MED- 3 MORE DEATHS - CWD - YOUNG HUNTERS

Dear Sir/Madam, In the Archives of Neurology you quoted (the abstract of which was attached to your email), we did not say CWD in humans will present like variant CJD.. That assumption would be wrong. I encourage you to read the whole article and call me if you have questions or need more clarification (phone: 404-639-3091).

Also, we do not claim that "no-one has ever been infected with prion disease from eating venison." Our conclusion stating that we found no strong evidence of CWD transmission to humans in the article you quoted or in any other forum is limited to the patients we investigated.

Ermias Belay, M.D. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Subject: TO CDC AND NIH - PUB MED- 3 MORE DEATHS - CWD - YOUNG HUNTERS

Sunday, November 10, 2002 6:26 PM .......snip........end..............TSS

Thursday, April 03, 2008

A prion disease of cervids: Chronic wasting disease 2008 1: Vet Res. 2008 Apr 3;39(4):41 A prion disease of cervids: Chronic wasting disease Sigurdson CJ.

snip... *** twenty-seven CJD patients who regularly consumed venison were reported to the Surveillance Center***,

snip... full text ;

http://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/2008/04/prion-disease-of-cervids-chronic.html

However, to date, no CWD infections have been reported in people.

sporadic, spontaneous CJD, 85%+ of all human TSE, did not just happen. never in scientific literature has this been proven. if one looks up the word sporadic or spontaneous at pubmed, you will get a laundry list of disease that are classified in such a way;

sporadic = 54,983 hits

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=sporadic

spontaneous = 325,650 hits

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=spontaneous

key word here is 'reported'. science has shown that CWD in humans will look like sporadic CJD.

SO, how can one assume that CWD has not already transmitted to humans? they can't, and it's as simple as that. from all recorded science to date, CWD has already transmitted to humans, and it's being misdiagnosed as sporadic CJD. ...terry

*** LOOKING FOR CWD IN HUMANS AS nvCJD or as an ATYPICAL CJD, LOOKING IN ALL THE WRONG PLACES $$$ ***

However, to date, no CWD infections have been reported in people. key word here is ‘reported’. science has shown that CWD in humans will look like sporadic CJD. SO, how can one assume that CWD has not already transmitted to humans? they can’t, and it’s as simple as that. from all recorded science to date, CWD has already transmitted to humans, and it’s being misdiagnosed as sporadic CJD. …terry

*** LOOKING FOR CWD IN HUMANS AS nvCJD or as an ATYPICAL CJD, LOOKING IN ALL THE WRONG PLACES $$$ ***

*** These results would seem to suggest that CWD does indeed have zoonotic potential, at least as judged by the compatibility of CWD prions and their human PrPC target. Furthermore, extrapolation from this simple in vitro assay suggests that if zoonotic CWD occurred, it would most likely effect those of the PRNP codon 129-MM genotype and that the PrPres type would be similar to that found in the most common subtype of sCJD (MM1).***

http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.4161/pri.28124?src=recsys

http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.4161/pri.28124?needAccess=true

https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/20/1/13-0858_article

So, this is what we leave our children and grandchildren?

Human iatrogenic TSE Prion Disease

France issues moratorium on prion research after fatal brain disease strikes two lab workers

By Barbara CasassusJul. 28, 2021 , 4:35 AM

PARIS—Five public research institutions in France have imposed a 3-month moratorium on the study of prions—a class of misfolding, infectious proteins that cause fatal brain diseases—after a retired lab worker who handled prions in the past was diagnosed with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), the most common prion disease in humans. An investigation is underway to find out whether the patient, who worked at a lab run by the National Research Institute for Agriculture, Food and Environment (INRAE), contracted the disease on the job.

If so, it would be the second such case in France in the past few years. In June 2019, an INRAE lab worker named Émilie Jaumain died at age 33, 10 years after pricking her thumb during an experiment with prion-infected mice. Her family is now suing INRAE for manslaughter and endangering life; her illness had already led to tightened safety measures at French prion labs.

Posted in: EuropeHealthScientific Community

doi:10.1126/science.abl6587

https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2021/07/france-issues-moratorium-prion-research-after-fatal-brain-disease-strikes-two-lab

Variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob Disease Diagnosed 7.5 Years after Occupational Exposure

Variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease was identified in a technician who had cut her thumb while handling brain sections of mice infected with adapted BSE 7.5 years earlier. The long incubation period was similar to that of the transfusion-transmitted form of the disease.

Variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob Disease Diagnosed 7.5 Years after Occupational Exposure

TO THE EDITOR:

We report a case of variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (CJD) that was plausibly related to accidental occupational exposure in a technician who had handled murine samples contaminated with the agent that causes bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) 7.5 years earlier.

In May 2010, when the patient was 24 years of age, she worked in a prion research laboratory, where she handled frozen sections of brain of transgenic mice that overexpressed the human prion protein with methionine at codon 129. The mice had been infected with a sheep-adapted form of BSE. During this process, she stabbed her thumb through a double pair of latex gloves with the sharp ends of a curved forceps used to handle the samples. Bleeding was noted at the puncture site.

Metrics

https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMc2000687

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2025

US NATIONAL PRION DISEASE PATHOLOGY SURVEILLANCE CENTER CJD TSE REPORT 2025

https://prionunitusaupdate.blogspot.com/2025/10/us-national-prion-disease-pathology.html

TSS

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home