Kuru was first described in official reports by Australian officers patrolling the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea in the early 1950s. Some unofficial accounts place kuru in the region as early as 1910. In 1951, Arthur Carey was the first to use the term
kuru in a report to describe a new disease afflicting the Fore tribes of Papua New Guinea (PNG). In his report, Carey noted that kuru mostly affected Fore women, eventually killing them. Kuru was noted in the Fore,
Yate and
Usurufa people in 1952–1953 by anthropologists
Ronald Berndt and
Catherine Berndt. They also thought that the magic causing kuru was contagious. It was also called negi-nagi, which meant foolish person as the victims laughed at spontaneous intervals. This disease, the Fore people believed, was caused by ghosts, because of the shaking and strange behaviour that comes with kuru. Attempting to cure this, they would feed victims
casuarina bark. When kuru had become an epidemic,
Daniel Carleton Gajdusek, a virologist, and
Vincent Zigas, another medical doctor, started research on the disease.
Cannibalism was suspected as a possible cause from the beginning but was not formally put forth as a hypothesis until 1967 by Glasse and more formally in 1968 by Mathews, Glasse, and Lindenbaum. In an effort to understand the pathology of kuru disease, Gajdusek established the first experimental tests on
chimpanzees for kuru at the US
National Institutes of Health (NIH). In his work, Gajdusek was also the first to compile a bibliography of kuru disease. Joe Gibbs joined Gajdusek to monitor and record the behaviour of the apes at the NIH and conduct their autopsies. Within two years, one of the chimps, Daisy, had developed kuru, demonstrating that an unknown disease factor was transmitted through infected biomaterial and that it was capable of crossing the species barrier to other primates. After Elisabeth Beck confirmed that this experiment had brought about the first experimental transmission of kuru, the finding was deemed a very important advance in human medicine, leading to the award of the
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine to Gajdusek in 1976. connecting it to
scrapie and
multiple sclerosis. He noted the disease's interactions with
glial cells, including the critical observation that the infectious process may depend on the structural rearrangement of the host's molecules. ==In popular culture==