Food Standards Agency
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Listen to this siteWednesday 25 June 2003
This research project aims to determine the possibility of potentially infective material contaminating the blood of cattle after stunning with either penetrating or non-penetrating captive bolt guns.
Study Duration : October 2001 to October 2003
Contractor : Bristol University
Since the confirmation of a link between BSE and vCJD there has been concern about the current stunning methods in cattle. The study will examine the prevalence of neural tissue embolism after stunning with either penetrating or non-penetrating captive bolt guns in cattle. Such embolism of neural tissue would pose a risk for contamination of edible tissues with potentially infective material. In addition to determining the prevalence of neural embolism, this project also aims to demonstrate whether the emboli could contaminate the carcass after passing through the lungs into the arterial circulation. Demonstration of embolic material in the aorta would substantiate claims that neural tissue emboli pose a risk for contamination of the entire carcass.
The project plan requires that a total of 200 cattle will be sampled under general anaesthesia. Half of these animals will be stunned using a penetrating captive bolt gun and the remaining half by a non-penetrating captive bolt gun. The prevalence of neural embolism will then be determined. In order to demonstrate whether the emboli could contaminate the carcass after passing through the lungs into the arterial circulation, blood will be sampled directly from the aorta or left ventricle of the heart after first injecting a suitable brain tissue suspension into the jugular venous supply of the same test animal.
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