- "From the wiry five-foot eight, one- hundred-and-forty-pounder of his early kuru days, when he hiked up and down the sides of mountains on two meals a day...with silver hair, a broad, corpulent face, and shrewd, deep-set eyes...He traveled the world continuously,... investigating rare and puzzling diseases." (pg.193)
This quote is significant because it helps readers visualize how Carleton Cajdusek became throughout the years of studying diseases. This image demonstrates the intelligence and passion that Carleton had during his work on kuru.
- "But attacking TSE agents such as radiation that destroy nucleic acid still leaves the agent infectious." (pg. 194)
This quote significant because this was Gajdusek's first hypothesis that he derived from the information that was given to him through his research. In this quote he discovered that since using radiation still left some infectious agents, there had to be other reproductive process involved. And soon he realized that the reproduction was called crystallization.
- "Suddenly, then, Gajdusek and his colleagues found themselves looking at two kinds of brain amyloidosis: infectious (the TSEs) and noninfectious (Alzheimer's)." (pg. 198)
This quote is significant because the discovery of the two kinds of brain amyloidosis brought many researchers and new money to the field. Additionally, this new information that Gajdusek concluded with made chemist more knowledgeable about the crystallization processes and the repetition of molecules.
- " Stephan Dorrell's Announce in Parliament of ten cases of Creutztedlt-Jakob disease attributed to eating infected beef produced world-war-scale headlines throughout Britain and Europe." (pg. 213)
This quote is significant because this attributed to many social and ethical problems in society. Specifically, British schools' concerns led to the ban of beef in cafeterias. Beef sales also plummeted and the prices of beef were cut in half.
- " Worse, a minimum incubation period of ten years, a reasonable estimate, would put the origin of those cases back at the beginning of the BSE epidemic, when the number of infected animals entering the human food supply was small-- implying that many more deaths might follow from the increasing human exposure to infected beef in the later 1980s."
This quote is significant because the people who were affected by infected beef can cause other people in a critical state if blood other parts of the body was donated. In addition, the increase of human exposure to infected beef lead to more deaths because cows can spread the kuru to other animals such as chicken. Chicken was normally fed bones and meat of cows, thus causing chicken to be also an another infected resource.
