Close Menu
  • Food Poisoning
    • Symptoms
    • Prevention
    • Treatment
    • Causes
  • Pathogens
    • Botulism
    • Campylobacter
    • E. coli
    • Cyclospora
    • Norovirus
    • Hepatitis A
    • Salmonella
    • Listeria
    • Shigella
  • Food Safety
    • How to wash your hands
    • Food Safty And The Holidays
  • Legal
    • Can I sue for Food Poisoning?
    • E. coli Lawyer
      • E. coli Lawsuit
    • Salmonella Lawyer
      • Salmonella Lawsuit
    • Botulism Lawyer
    • Cyclospora Lawyer
    • Shigella Lawyer
    • Hepatitis A Lawyer
  • Outbreaks and Recalls
  • Connect With A Lawyer
What's Hot

Interesting Research into Food Poisoning (Think Salmonella, Listeria, and E. coli) Slated for 2026

January 9, 2026

Wild Pathogens: How Wildlife Brings Foodborne Illness Like Salmonella and E. Coli from Field to Fork

January 9, 2026

Antibiotic-Resistant Foodborne Infections: A Growing Threat at the Dinner Table

January 9, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube
  • About
  • Contact Us
Food Poisoning NewsFood Poisoning News
  • Home
  • Food Poisoning
    • What is Food Poisoning?
      • Symptoms
      • Causes
      • Prevention
      • Treatment
      • Statistics
    • Pathogens
      • Botulism
      • Campylobacter
      • E. coli
      • Hepatitis A
      • Shigella
      • Norovirus
      • Salmonella
      • Cyclospora
      • Listeria
  • Food Safety
    • How to wash your hands
    • Food Safty And The Holidays
  • Legal
    • Salmonella Lawyer
      • Salmonella Lawsuit
    • E. coli Lawyer
      • E. coli Lawsuit
    • Cyclospora Lawyer
    • Shigella Lawyer
    • Hepatitis A Lawyer
    • Botulism Lawyer
  • Outbreaks and Recalls
Food Poisoning NewsFood Poisoning News
Home»Policy, Science & Research»Understanding Prions and Their Human Dangers
Understanding Prions and Their Human Dangers
Policy, Science & Research

Understanding Prions and Their Human Dangers

Kit RedwineBy Kit RedwineJune 6, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Reddit

Prions, abbreviated from “proteinaceous infectious particles”, are misfolded proteins capable of transmitting their abnormal shape to normal cellular proteins, triggering fatal neurodegenerative diseases in humans and animals. Unlike bacteria or viruses, prions lack genetic material (DNA or RNA) and propagate solely through structural corruption of the major prion protein (PrP). Normally, PrP exists as a harmless, alpha-helix-rich protein (PrPC) on cell surfaces. When misfolded into a beta-sheet-dominant form (PrPSc), it aggregates into toxic clumps that destroy brain tissue, creating microscopic holes that give the brain a sponge-like appearance.   

Mechanisms of Pathogenicity  

The danger of prions lies in their unique properties:  

  1. Resilience: Prions resist standard sterilization methods, including autoclaving (high-temperature steam), chemical disinfectants, and radiation. This complicates decontamination of surgical tools or food processing equipment.   
  2. Silent Progression: After exposure, prions can incubate for years, even decades, before symptoms emerge. Once neurological decline begins, death typically occurs within months.   
  3. Transmission Routes: Humans may acquire prion diseases through:
    1. Consumption of contaminated meat (e.g., variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease/vCJD from BSE-infected beef)   
    2. Inherited genetic mutations in the PRNP gene (15% of cases)   
    3. Medical procedures involving infected tissues or instruments (iatrogenic CJD)   

Documented Human Prion Diseases  

Major forms include:  

  • Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (sCJD):
    • Origin: Unknown (accounts for 85% of cases)  
    • Incidence: 1–2 cases per million people annually  
    • Features: Rapid dementia, muscle jerks, and death within months.   
  • Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (vCJD):
    • Origin: Linked to BSE (“mad cow”)-contaminated beef  
    • Incidence: 232 confirmed cases globally (primarily in the UK post-1996)  
    • Features: Affects younger adults; psychiatric symptoms precede neurological decline.   
  • Iatrogenic CJD:
    • Origin: Medical exposure (contaminated surgical tools, grafts, or hormones)  
    • Incidence: <1% of cases (485 documented cases worldwide)  
    • Features: Latency periods up to 30 years.   
  • Kuru:
    • Origin: Ritualistic cannibalism in Papua New Guinea  
    • Incidence: No cases since the 1950s after cultural practices ceased  
    • Features: Tremors, loss of motor control.   

Why Prions Remain a Persistent Hazard  

  • Foodborne Transmission: The 1986–2001 BSE epidemic demonstrated prions’ zoonotic potential. Humans developed vCJD after consuming prion-contaminated beef, highlighting vulnerabilities in food systems.   
  • Environmental Persistence: Prions shed via saliva, urine, or carcasses persist in soil/water for years. Chronic wasting disease (CWD) in deer/elk spreads across 32 U.S. states, with lab studies detecting prions in muscle tissue, raising concerns for hunters.   
  • Medical Risks: Iatrogenic transmission via contaminated surgical instruments requires specialized decontamination (e.g., incineration or alkaline hydrolysis).   
  • No Treatments: All prion diseases are universally fatal, with care limited to symptom management.   
  • Diagnostic Challenges: Definitive diagnosis often requires postmortem brain analysis; blood/cerebrospinal fluid tests (e.g., RT-QuIC) are not universally accessible.   

While rare (~1–2 cases per million annually), prion diseases represent a critical public health threat due to their lethality, environmental resilience, and potential for accidental transmission.  Ongoing surveillance of animal and human populations remains vital.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Avatar photo
Kit Redwine

Related Posts

Interesting Research into Food Poisoning (Think Salmonella, Listeria, and E. coli) Slated for 2026

January 9, 2026

Navigating the New Terrain of Food Safety: Understanding Risks in the Plant-Based Diet Revolution

December 28, 2025

Interesting New Research into Listeria Monocytogenes – The Deadly food Borne Pathogen

December 19, 2025

The Intricacies of Whole Genome Sequencing: Epidemiologists Tracing Food-Borne Pathogens

November 24, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Attorney Advertisement
Ron Simon

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest food safety recall, outbreak, & investigation news.

Latest Posts

Interesting Research into Food Poisoning (Think Salmonella, Listeria, and E. coli) Slated for 2026

January 9, 2026

Wild Pathogens: How Wildlife Brings Foodborne Illness Like Salmonella and E. Coli from Field to Fork

January 9, 2026

Antibiotic-Resistant Foodborne Infections: A Growing Threat at the Dinner Table

January 9, 2026

Food Poisoning News is a website devoted to providing you with the most current information on food safety, dangerous pathogens, food poisoning outbreaks and outbreak prevention, and food poisoning litigation.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube
Latest Posts

Interesting Research into Food Poisoning (Think Salmonella, Listeria, and E. coli) Slated for 2026

January 9, 2026

Wild Pathogens: How Wildlife Brings Foodborne Illness Like Salmonella and E. Coli from Field to Fork

January 9, 2026

Antibiotic-Resistant Foodborne Infections: A Growing Threat at the Dinner Table

January 9, 2026
Get Informed

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest food safety recall, outbreak, & investigation news.

Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube
  • Home
© 2026 Food Poisoning News. Sponsored by Ron Simon & Associates a Houston, TX law firm. Powered by ArmaVita.
Our website and content are for informational purposes only. Food Poisoning News does not provide legal advice, medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.