Irradiated Foods Cause Severe Neurological Damage

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Apr 16, 2009, 1:13:29 PM4/16/09
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Irradiated Foods Cause Severe Neurological Damage
by: Sherry Baker, Health Sciences Editor
_http://www.naturaln ews.com/025971. html_
(http://www.naturaln ews.com/025971. html)

(NaturalNews) In a study just published in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, scientists from the University of Wisconsin-Madison
(UW-Madison) report on cats developing severe neurological symptoms due to a
degradation of myelin, the fatty insulator of nerve fibers called axons.
Because myelin facilitates the conduction of nerve signals, when it is lost or
damaged there can be impairment of sensation, movement, thinking and other
functions, depending on what particular nerves are affected. This loss of myelin
is found in several disorders of the central nervous system in humans -- the
best known being multiple sclerosis (MS).

So what caused the cats to develop neurological problems? Although the
researchers* statement to the media practically buries the fact, a close read
shows the animals were fine until fed irradiated food. What*s more, when they
were taken off the irradiated diet, the animals' nervous systems began healing.

The new study took place when the researchers were faced with reports of a
mysterious illness in pregnant cats. A commercial company had been testing
various diets on the animals to see how the food impacted growth and development
in the felines. The food used, it turns out, had been irradiated.
Irradiation, which is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for many
human as well as animal foods, involves exposing foods briefly to a radiant
energy source such as gamma rays or electron beams in order to kill bacteria.

Some of the cats eating the irradiated cat food exhibited very severe
neurological symptoms, including movement disorders, vision loss and even
paralysis. **After being on the diet for three to four months, the pregnant cats
started to develop progressive neurological disease,** said Ian Duncan, a
professor of medical sciences at the UW-Madison School of Veterinary Medicine and an
authority on demyelinating diseases, in a statement to the media.

The sick cats were shown to have widely distributed the very severe
demyelization of the central nervous system. Their neurological symptoms were very
much like those seen in people with MS and other demyelization disorders. When
the felines were taken off the irradiated foods, they began to recover
slowly. However, according to Dr. Duncan, the restored myelin sheaths were no
longer as thick as normal myelin sheaths.

The finding is important, the scientists concluded in their study, because
it shows the central nervous system retains the ability to reestablish myelin
-- so strategies that could be developed to spur the growth of new myelin
sheaths anywhere nerves themselves are preserved could be a possible therapy for
treating a host of severe neurological diseases in humans. **The key thing
is that it absolutely confirms the notion that remyelinating strategies are
clinically important,** Duncan stated.

Curiously, although the scientists' related their findings to possible human
applications, they were quick to dismiss a possible connection between
people, irradiated food and health risk. **We think it is extremely unlikely that
(irradiated food) could become a human health problem,** Duncan explained in
the media statement. **We think it is species specific.**

However, not everyone agrees irradiated food is fine for humans or animals.
According to the Center for Food Safety, studies have shown irradiation
produces volatile toxic chemicals such as benzene and toluene, which are known or
suspected to cause cancer and birth defects. A 2001 study found an
association between colon tumors and 2-alkylcyclobutanon es (2-ACB*s), a new chemical
compound detected only in foods that have been irradiated.

For more information:
_http://www.centerfo rfoodsafety. org/_ (http://www.centerfo rfoodsafety. org/)
...
_http://firedoglake. com/2008/ 08/23/n_ (http://firedoglake. com/2008/ 08/23/n)
...
_http://www.fda. gov/opacom/ catalog/i_ (http://www.fda. gov/opacom/ catalog/i)
...



About the author
Sherry Baker is a widely published writer whose work has appeared in
Newsweek, Health, the Atlanta Journal and Constitution, Yoga Journal, Optometry,
Atlanta, Arthritis Today, Natural Healing Newsletter, OMNI, UCLA's "Healthy
Years" newsletter, Mount Sinai School of Medicine's "Focus on Health Aging"
newsletter, the Cleveland Clinic's "Men's Health Advisor" newsletter and many
others.

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