PLOSone abstract from October, “Isolation of Clostridium perfringens Type B in an Individual at First Clinical Presentation of Multiple Sclerosis Provides Clues for Environmental Triggers of the Disease.”
The strain produces a toxin called “epsilon” (there are five strains of the bacteria whose toxins are called alpha, beta, etc.) and which afflicts sheep and cattle, but it wasn’t previously suspected to affect humans. Doctors detected the strain in a woman who was showing the first signs of MS, then checked other MS patients for prior exposure and found they were 10 times more likely to show immunoreactivity to epsilon toxin than the control group of healthy people.
So they just finished testing the affects of the epsilon toxin itself, and it happens to attack the cells affected by MS in the same way they see in MS patients.
NBC News link
The good news is that we already have vaccines for it for farm animals, and have already developed some antibody techniques to combat the toxin in people in case it is ever used as a weapon. The scary news is that this strain has been detected in about 3% of food samples.
The strain produces a toxin called “epsilon” (there are five strains of the bacteria whose toxins are called alpha, beta, etc.) and which afflicts sheep and cattle, but it wasn’t previously suspected to affect humans. Doctors detected the strain in a woman who was showing the first signs of MS, then checked other MS patients for prior exposure and found they were 10 times more likely to show immunoreactivity to epsilon toxin than the control group of healthy people.
So they just finished testing the affects of the epsilon toxin itself, and it happens to attack the cells affected by MS in the same way they see in MS patients.
NBC News link
The good news is that we already have vaccines for it for farm animals, and have already developed some antibody techniques to combat the toxin in people in case it is ever used as a weapon. The scary news is that this strain has been detected in about 3% of food samples.