CBCnews
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share

$1.6 M in funding announced for brain-wasting disease research

Last Updated: Wednesday, June 17, 2009 | 4:49 PM ET

Prairie researchers investigating diseases such as BSE or CWD gained $1.6 million in funding Wednesday.

Chronic wasting disease or CWD affects ranched elk and wild deer in Saskatchewan and Alberta. Like BSE or mad cow disease, it is caused by infectious proteins called prions that infect the brain and spinal cord of the animals.

The three large-scale projects are based in Alberta and Manitoba and will focus on:

  • Studying the biological, socioeconomic and cultural implications of CWD on people.
  • Controlling the spread of CWD to minimize its potential impact on human and animal health.
  • Understanding how and why prions become infectious and cause disease.

"Although no evidence indicates whether or not CWD is transmissible to humans, it may still have severe socioeconomic consequences for hunters, for those in the tourism and nature industries, and especially for aboriginal communities," Prof. Stéphane McLachlan of the University of Manitoba's environmental conservation lab said in a release.

Aboriginal communities are concerned about contamination and diseases of wildlife. Scientists, wildlife biologists and veterinarians will work with aboriginal communities in Alberta and Saskatchewan to address communications gaps.

Public health Prof. Norman Neumann of the University of Alberta will lead a team investigating when and how animals become contagious.

Probing prions

In the third project, Dr. Valerie Sim of the department of medicine at U of A will lead laboratory and computer simulation researchers to determine how normal prion proteins become misshapen and infectious.

"A better understanding of this protein's role in disease development is critical to develop new treatment approaches and may shed light on how other neurodegenerative syndromes, such as Alzheimer's disease," Sim said.

The federal government's PrioNet Canada and the Alberta Prion Research Institute are providing the funding.

PrioNet was created in 2005 in response to BSE. It is hosted at the University of British Columbia and the Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute.

  •  
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share
 

Related

Health Headlines

More H1N1 vaccine, ventilators to come Video
Ontario supplied hospitals with 200 additional ventilators on Friday in anticipation of a surge in swine flu cases.
Trade show pitches surgical passages to India Video
Exhibitors at a Toronto trade fair are hoping to add surgery to the list of reasons Canadians travel, but a medical ethicist questions the lack of oversight.
Weight gain in pregnancy guides updated
Health Canada is formally replacing its guidelines on weight gain during pregnancy to match new U.S. recommendations.
Bullying is a public health issue: researcher
Bullying should be considered a public health problem and governments should adopt national strategies against it, says a Canadian professor who led a study of bullying in 40 countries.
H1N1 intensifying in Canada but subsiding elsewhere: WHO
H1N1 appears to have peaked in parts of western Europe and the United States but transmission continues to intensity in Canada, the World Health Organization said Friday.

People who read this also read …

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

Headlines

Ottawa will stay course on stimulus: Flaherty Video
Rather than turning off the stimulus taps or pouring more fuel on the economic fire, Ottawa will stand pat with the $61 billion in stimulus spending announced in January, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty says.
Flood forces Vancouver Island evacuations Video
Dozens of homes have water "up to the doorknobs" and others are under evacuation alert after heavy rain combined with high tides to flood low-lying parts of Duncan, B.C., an hour's drive north of Victoria.
Colvin's job safe despite Afghan torture testimony Video
The Conservatives will not try to remove Richard Colvin from his post in Washington, Defence Minister Peter MacKay says, even though they question the credibility of his testimony on Afghan prisoners.
UN human rights committee votes to censure Iran Video
A United Nations committee has approved a Canadian-led resolution urging Iran to stop harassing political opponents in the wake of its disputed presidential elections.
Hundreds rescued from U.K. flooding Video
Raging floods engulfed northern England's picturesque Lake District on Friday following the heaviest rainfall ever recorded in Britain. A police officer died and hundreds of people were forced to evacuate.