However Paul Van Buynder, chief medical officer for the Fraser Health authority, said yesterday that even if the two suspected cases end up being Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease it's not "drastically unusual."
The confirmed case of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, or CJD, was a resident in a long-term care home who died a year ago, Van Buynder said.
He said the two other patients suspected of having Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease are currently hospitalized. None of the patients are related; all lived in different towns.
Buynder said it's "highly unlikely" that the remaining three cases will be confirmed as CJD.
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Cases are only confirmed after a sample of brain tissue, typically taken from the patient post-mortem, is tested at a national laboratory, he said.
Before that happens, doctors make an initial diagnosis based on MRI images, blood tested for specific proteins and an electroencephalogram, a test that measures the brain's activity.
Only 30 to 50 cases are reported annually in Canada, and five of those cases are expected to occur in British Columbia, he said.
"It's not mad cow disease. It has nothing to do with the food chain. Neither the public nor anybody in our hospitals should be worried that they're about to get this nasty disease."
Provincial health officer Dr. Perry Kendall said CJD causes the rapid onset of dementia, leading to a coma usually within a six-month time frame, because agents known as preons destroy the brain.
One strain has been linked with mad cow disease, but Van Buynder said more than 90 percent of the cases are sporadic and health officials don't know its cause, and they have no treatment or cure.