mike243
Well-Known Member
https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/me...S&cvid=31f34c4056204b15bf830075e6a3705f&ei=58 pretty interesting/makes you wonder
In reality this is blood to blood transmission! Not a biologist here but blood to blood can expose vulnerabilities unknown!Looks to me like the tics can transfer it to other animals. All the more reason to take precaution against the little bastiges
Might wanna start dosing your deer as well.Give myself a good dose of Happy Jack and ivermecton before I hit the turkey woods
THIS. If ticks bite thousands of people per year and no CWD in a person, then this shows our fear of the disease is overblown. I agree.This is pretty good evidence that humans don't need to worry about CWD, right? Given how long CWD has been around, surely have been more than a few ticks that traveled from a deer to a human. I'm not a scientist though may be completely wrong.
And then we eat rare back strap. Kinda the same thing. Heat doesn't kill prions anywayI would think ticks sucking on a cwd deer would show positive for cwd.
I'm not convinced of this. I think it probably doesn't come from most muscle tissue, but eating squirrel brains has been connected to crutchfield-jacobson's disease and it's a prion disease too. And mad cow can jump to humans (another prion disease. All the more reason to soak my hunting clothes in permethrin.This is pretty good evidence that humans don't need to worry about CWD, right? Given how long CWD has been around, surely have been more than a few ticks that traveled from a deer to a human. I'm not a scientist though may be completely wrong.
could happen anyway naturally.If that's the case we're screwed. Unless they can isolate genetics that show immunity and let those deer breed out CWD
Also, no limits on killing ticks.Are they going to pass new regulations that you can't transport ticks from a CWD zone or state to a non-CWD zone/state?
I've always thought the same- why I've never worried about eating deer/elk meat (muscle), but been careful with my skinning practices around spine/lymph nodes.I'm not convinced of this. I think it probably doesn't come from most muscle tissue, but eating squirrel brains has been connected to crutchfield-jacobson's disease and it's a prion disease too. And mad cow can jump to humans (another prion disease. All the more reason to soak my hunting clothes in permethrin.
that's how i understood it.I've always thought the same- why I've never worried about eating deer/elk meat (muscle), but been careful with my skinning practices around spine/lymph nodes.
I might be misunderstanding the study, but is it not showing that ticks pull enough prion out of a cwd infected deer to infect a different deer they attach too?
Yes. I don't know why I remember this, but the average number of hosts in a ticks lifespan is 3.Once a tick gets hold, do they move to different hosts? I'd think they only move on once the host dies and starts to get cold.