Because - in order to diagnose the condition - you need to dissect the brain after death.
If you're not taking the morality of cannibalism into consideration, many devastating diseases can be transmitted by eating humans. A well known one is Kuru, or transmissible spongiform encephalopathy. More recently, a similar encephalopathy called mad cow disease reared its ugly head. It was believed to have come from cows being fed feeds containing meat, including from cattle and sheep, another species susceptible to encephalopathy. If humans had consumed humans infected with the mad cow disease, they would have contracted contracted it also. You can also contract more common diseases. It's not a good idea for humans to eat their own species or to feed animals their own species, especially if humans will be consuming them. Or... ...because we are also humans.
Chronic bronchitis can be serious in any animal including humans.
Alzheimer's is pathological similar to many diseases. You might be thinking of bovine spongiform encephalopathy or Creutzfeld Jacobs disease (CJD) in humans.
Stress in other mammals is the same of that in humans.
my dog has chronic honking and coughing. she has colapsed trachea. allergy syrup has helped but it has become chronic. Can you give a dog humans inhaler to open airwaves.
Literally, no. Humans, mating with humans, can only produce human progeny. Metaphorically, yes. People can carry 'demons' (traumatic past memories) People can become demons (morally corrupt)
No - the veterinary license qualifies the holder to diagnose and treat animals but not humans.
No, BSE (bovine spongiform encephalopathy, the scientific name for mad cow disease) is generally thought to be caused by a prion, a misfolded protein. There are some theories that BSE could be caused by a virino, a very small virus, but this is not the currently accepted research.
In a matter of speaking, yes. Mis-folded proteins are what cause "Mad Cow Disease," also known as Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy in cattle or Creuztfeldt-Jakobson's Disease in humans.
Schilling's hemogram is a numerical evaluation of the WBC ration used to diagnose some physiological anomalies in humans
Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE, the scientific name for mad cow disease) is the name of a progressive neurologic disease caused by an infectious prion in cattle. When humans become infected by this prion, the syndrome observed in humans is called variant Creutzfeldt-Jacobs Disease (vCJD).
Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), commonly known as "mad cow disease," is a neurodegenerative disease that affects cattle. It is caused by abnormal proteins called prions, which lead to the degeneration of brain tissue, resulting in spongy lesions. BSE can be transmitted to humans through the consumption of infected beef products, leading to a variant form of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. The disease has significant implications for public health and cattle farming practices.