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Hydatid disease unlike most parasitic diseases is more prevalent in the northern hemisphere. Human infection is most common in sheep-raising countries such as Australia and New Zealand, throughout England and Europe, the Middle East, Russia, Northern China, and Japan. In the Americas the disease is especially prevalent in the Southern Cone countries such as Argentina, Uruguay and Chile, and also occurs in Alaska and Canada.Alveolar hydatid disease (E. multilocularis) is a less widespread disease that occurs in countries with larger distributions of the reservoir hosts dogs, wolves, foxes and cats. The disease is mainly prevalent in northern and central Europe, Alaska, and parts of Canada.The spread of Echinococcus infection depends on the presence of dogs and foxes as definitive hosts, susceptible intermediate hosts such as sheep, goats and swine, an environment that enables egg survival, and human populations living in close contact with domesticated animals.
Quote from: DoubleJ on March 25, 2014, 08:55:32 AMSo, if an elk or deer is infected, as long as I only eat the meat and not the organs, and since the cysts haven't passed through a carnivore and ended up in it's poop, I'm safe, right?I don't feel safe telling you what to eat from an infected animal. Another concern is that you also protect the family dog from exposure to infected animals or their feces.The infected moose liver I posted the photos of was destroyed. The moose meat was eaten by the hunter and his family, I just hope they cooked it all well done. I assume, but do not know for certain that cooking the meat well done makes it safe to eat.
So, if an elk or deer is infected, as long as I only eat the meat and not the organs, and since the cysts haven't passed through a carnivore and ended up in it's poop, I'm safe, right?
My point has been dont minimize the opinion of experienced people. They have a lot to offer and in some subjects they know more than the people publishing stuff on the Internet.
Quote from: bearpaw on March 25, 2014, 10:36:20 AMQuote from: DoubleJ on March 25, 2014, 08:55:32 AMSo, if an elk or deer is infected, as long as I only eat the meat and not the organs, and since the cysts haven't passed through a carnivore and ended up in it's poop, I'm safe, right?I don't feel safe telling you what to eat from an infected animal. Another concern is that you also protect the family dog from exposure to infected animals or their feces.The infected moose liver I posted the photos of was destroyed. The moose meat was eaten by the hunter and his family, I just hope they cooked it all well done. I assume, but do not know for certain that cooking the meat well done makes it safe to eat.We live in Shelton so no wolves around here yet. We almost lost the family dog to tape worms a couple of months ago. The dogs are house dogs and only go into our fenced dog run outside. My entire house has been 100% flea free for about 7 years now. The worms, from our best guess through days and days of research, came from the deer bones we gave them from our harvest. They would not have been exposed to them any other way. Since there was no risk of exposure, or so we thought, we never thought to worm them. The old dog went WAY downhill. I had an emergency help thread on here a few months ago about it. He pooped and I saw worm segments in his poop. Come to find out, he had so many worms in him that he had become severely anemic and almost died from it. We wormed him and within 48 hours he had turned around. Deer bones will now be thrown out with the hide from now on. Meat has been fine. Based on the scare we had, I had myself and the boys checked at the doctor and we were worm free.
Wolf lover, you're talking about e. granulosus as if it's no big deal. You're lying to yourself and everyone else. It is a big deal. If these were naturally occurring wolves, such as the ones which used to live in WA, I would maybe agree with you. But they aren't. They were brought in from Canada and they were sick when they were brought in. They were supposed to be disease-free as part of the requirements for introducing animals into the ecosystem. Science was manipulated to import these eaters into our state and lies were told, and you're OK with that. These veterinarians that you hold so dear for their knowledge let their zeal for wolves, like yours, dictate what they told us. They should be stripped of their ability to practice and criminally tried for breaking the law by lying to Congress to achieve their goals.
Quote from: pianoman9701 on March 25, 2014, 12:31:48 PMWolf lover, you're talking about e. granulosus as if it's no big deal. You're lying to yourself and everyone else. It is a big deal. If these were naturally occurring wolves, such as the ones which used to live in WA, I would maybe agree with you. But they aren't. They were brought in from Canada and they were sick when they were brought in. They were supposed to be disease-free as part of the requirements for introducing animals into the ecosystem. Science was manipulated to import these eaters into our state and lies were told, and you're OK with that. These veterinarians that you hold so dear for their knowledge let their zeal for wolves, like yours, dictate what they told us. They should be stripped of their ability to practice and criminally tried for breaking the law by lying to Congress to achieve their goals.FAQ FROM IDFG Website on this issue:Were wolves examined and treated for Echinococcus granulosus before they were released in Idaho?All wolves captured in Canada for relocation to Yellowstone National Park and central Idaho were sampled for disease (blood, feces and external parasites) and treated twice for lice (Ivermectin and pyrethrin), roundworms (Ivermectin), and tapeworms (Praziquantel).Does not appear your statements are accurate piano. I think the issue some have with this subject is that there are a lot of diseases/parasites etc. one can get and the attention this one is given is probably not proportional to its risk to humans...e.g, anti-wolf fringe often drum it up as some kind of epidemic...just like they do with respect to effects of wolves on other issues. It is good to be aware of this tapeworm and practice good hygiene if you are a hunter...wdfw should get something on their website like IDFG...even a link would suffice...then we can all be happy right?
Maybe TSA should have done full cavity searches on them before they cleared security.