Transmissible Virus Dementia: Evaluation of a Zoonotic Hypothesis

Abstract
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) and kuru are subacute transmissible dementing encephalopathies characterized by spongiform changes in the brain. Scrapie is a similar slow viral encephalopathy which affects sheep, goats and certain other animals. Anecdotal reports suggest that Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease could be a zoonosis. To evaluate the possibility that CJD is acquired from animals, a case-control study was conducted on 26 well-documented CJD cases and 40 controls. Data were collected on exposure to animals through occupations, hobbies, sports and pets. An excess exposure to certain animals was noted among the patients compared to controls in relation to occupation (deer, monkey, squirrel; odds ratio (OR) = 8.9; p < 0.10) and hobbies (deer, OR = 9.0; rabbit, OR = 6.0; p < 0.05). Similarly, exposure to animal organs was significantly greater in the CJD group (OR = 20.9; p < 0.005). Statistically significant increased exposure to sheep or goats was not found among the patients. However, since spongiform encephalopathy has a wider host range than sheep and goats, the increased exposure to certain other animals suggests that a zoonotic source for CJD should be further explored.