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Is there any treatment?
There is no treatment that can cure or control CJD. Current treatment is aimed at alleviating symptoms and making the patient
as comfortable as possible. Opiate drugs can help relieve pain, and the drugs clonazepam and sodium valproate may help relieve
involuntary muscle jerks.
What is the prognosis?
About 90 percent of patients die within 1 year. In the early stages of disease, patients may have failing memory, behavioral
changes, lack of coordination and visual disturbances. As the illness progresses, mental deterioration becomes pronounced
and involuntary movements, blindness, weakness of extremities, and coma may occur.
What research is being done?
The leading scientific theory at this time maintains that CJD is caused by a type of protein called a prion. The harmless
and the infectious forms of the prion protein are nearly identical, but the infectious form takes a different folded shape
than the normal protein. Researchers are examining whether the transmissible agent is, in fact, a prion and trying to discover
factors that influence prion infectivity and how the disorder damages the brain. Using rodent models of the disease and brain
tissue from autopsies, they are also trying to identify factors that influence the susceptibility to the disease and that
govern when in life the disease appears.