Joke Collection Website - News headlines - Cattle skin disease broke out in many places in India, and residents no longer drink milk! Will it be transmitted to people through milk?

Cattle skin disease broke out in many places in India, and residents no longer drink milk! Will it be transmitted to people through milk?

A large number of bovine skin diseases broke out. In several states, including Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan, more than 6.5438+0.7 million cows were infected and more than 75,000 cows died. Residents have stopped drinking local milk, fearing that the virus will be transmitted to humans. It is reported that bovine nodular dermatosis is also called bovine nodular dermatitis or bovine papular skin. Block dermatosis is a viral infectious disease, which can cause fever, skin nodules and even death in cattle. However, tumor dermatosis virus is host-specific, and only spreads in cattle, but not in humans, so eating dairy products or beef will not lead to transmission to humans.

Pasteurized or boiled infected milk will kill many bacteria and viruses in milk, so you can eat it as usual without worrying too much. It is usually not contagious to humans, and it is safe to drink milk from infected cows every day, although many people are still worried about it. Skin virus is sensitive to heat, at 55? Two hours below zero, 65 degrees? It takes 30 minutes to inactivate at C, and the milk can be heated and boiled before drinking. Bovine nodular dermatosis, also known as bovine nodular dermatitis or bovine bullous disease, is a virus targeting cattle, which spreads through direct contact with blood-sucking insects such as mosquitoes, flies, lice and wasps, as well as through contaminated food and water.

The disease is characterized by nodules on the skin, which can cover the whole body of animals, and the lesions usually appear in the mouth and upper respiratory tract. It is caused by pox virus that infects cattle. Collective grazing, fly bites and the introduction of new animals are all related to the development of lumpy skin diseases. According to the National Library of Medicine of the National Biotechnology Information Center, systemic effects include fever, anorexia, lactose imbalance and pneumonia, which will make animals severely emaciated, barren for several months, and die in extreme cases. So far, there is no evidence that the virus is transmitted through human and animal diseases, and there is no evidence to support human infection with lumpy skin diseases.