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How your cat could be making you ‘crazy’

By | March 19, 2012, 5:10 AM PDT

It’s human nature to read about a disease and then, like a hypochondriac, be convinced (or at least wonder if) you’ve got it. So, apologies in advance: You’re about to wonder whether you’re infected with a cat parasite.

It’s long been known that the microbe in question, Toxoplasma gondii (T. gondii or Toxo for short), can harm people with weakened immune systems, such as people with AIDS. It’s also been known that pregnant women should avoid cat litter so they don’t catch T. gondii, lest they pass it on to their babies, causing brain damage in the infants or even death.

However, new research from an unconventional scientist is showing that even if we catch it and our bodies overcome it, the parasite can, in its dormant phase, when it lodges in our brain cells, alter our basic personalities — making us more or less outgoing, trusting and fearful, and even making us more prone to schizophrenia, car crashes and suicides.

As the researcher, the Czech evolutionary biologist Jaroslav Flegr, told The Atlantic, which wrote a much-talked-about feature on him and his theory, when you consider all its impacts, “Toxoplasma might even kill as many people as malaria, or at least a million people a year.”

The basic premise

Just why would a cat parasite in humans cause personality changes? Basically, because, as the Atlantic put it, “Once inside an animal or human host, the parasite then needs to get back into the cat, the only place where it can sexually reproduce.”

Generally, he hypothesizes that the parasite, which commonly ends up in rodents that cats prey on, causes changes in the rodent that will put the rodent in a position to get the parasite back into a cat.

For instance, an Imperial College London parasitologist Joanne Webster and other researchers before her showed that rats infected with T. gondii were not only less cautious in areas where they were more likely to be preyed upon but that they were actually more active in those spots. She then showed that infected rats actually preferred the smell of cat urine over other smells such as their own smell, the smell of water or the smell of a non-predator’s urine. Another study showed that the parasite actually makes the smell of cat urine sexually arousing to rats.

All of these effects would make the rat more likely to get caught by the cat, putting the parasite back in a place where it can reproduce.

How the parasite affects humans

Until Flegr’s studies, it was thought that when healthy children and adults get the parasite, it only gives them brief flu-like symptoms and then lies dormant inside brain cells.

But when Flegr gave personality and reaction-time tests to Czech subjects who had the parasite and subjects who didn’t, he found significant differences:

  • Subjects with the parasite had significantly delayed reaction times.
  • Compared to men without the parasite, infected men were more introverted, suspicious, oblivious to others’ opinions of them and more dismissive of rules.
  • Infected women were just the opposite: more extroverted, trusting, image-conscious and careful to follow rules than uninfected women.
Before we launch into why men and women showed such different characteristics, let’s dive deeper into the slowed reaction times, which inspired Flegr to launch two epidemiological studies in the Czech Republic. These showed that people who tested positive for the parasite were about 2.5 times likelier to be in a traffic accident than the uninfected; subsequent studies in Turkey replicated his results. As the Atlantic concludes:
“With up to one-third of the world infected with the parasite, Flegr now calculates that T. gondii is a likely factor in several hundred thousand road deaths each year. In addition, reanalysis of his personality-questionnaire data revealed that … many other people who have the latent infection feel intrepid in dangerous situations. ‘Maybe,’ he says, ‘that’s another reason they get into traffic accidents. They don’t have a normal fear response.’”

As for why men and women with the parasite show such different personalities, Flegr hypothesizes that the parasite makes them more anxious, and men deal with increased anxiety by withdrawing, whereas women who are more anxious seek solace through social bonding.

Links to schizophrenia

More seriously, a small study that Flegr did of the brains of 44 schizophrenic patients showed, via MRI scans, that 12 of them had reduced gray matter in the brain, and this size decrease was almost exclusively found in the subjects who tesed positive for the parasite. Researchers who looked at a subset of the 70 epidemiology studies since the 1950s that have examined the link between schizophrenia andT. gondii found the these studies also showed the schizophrenic patients with Toxo have reduced gray matter in their brain. Other researchers also found that people with the parasite are two to three times more likely to have the disease. All of these findings might explain why schizophrenia runs in families.

Another English parasitologist (Glenn McConkey at the University of Leeds) found that the parasite boosts dopamine production in the host brain. Coincidentally, dopamine tends to be unusually high in schizophrenics. Furthermore, they found that a petri dish of T. gondii will actually stop growing if antipsychotic medicines are added to the petri dish.

Links to suicide

Toxo may also be associated with increased suicide. As the Atlantic put it, “A 2011 study of 20 European countries, the national suicide rate among women increased in direct proportion to the prevalence of the latent Toxo infection in each nation’s female population.” Other studies of the general population as well as of groups suffering from bipolar disorder, severe depression and schizophrenia also support the link between T. gondii and higher incidences of suicidal behavior.

How to protect yourself

First, don’t get rid of your cat if it’s an indoor cat. They don’t have the parasite. And if you have an outdoor cat, just be wary of it when it’s young and has just begun hunting. During that period, for about three weeks of the cat’s life, it may shed the parasite. So, during that short time, you’d just want to keep your kitchen counters and tables clean.

Even more importantly, scrub all vegetables and take care to drink purified water, especially when you’re in developing countries. Humans can catch the parasite by drinking water contaminated with cat feces, eating unwashed vegetables or, the most common point of contamination for Europeans, eating raw or undercooked meat. Flegr says that the French, who love very rare steak, can have infection rates as high as 55%. (Americans, on the other hand, have infection rates in the range of 10%-20%.

Joanna Webster, the parasitologist at Imperial College london, says:

“I don’t want to cause any panic. In the vast majority of people, there will be no ill effects, and those who are affected will mostly demonstrate subtle shifts of behavior. But in a small number of cases, [Toxo infection] may be linked to schizophrenia and other disturbances associated with altered dopamine levels—for example, obsessive-compulsive disorder, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, and mood disorders. The rat may live two or three years, while humans can be infected for many decades, which is why we may be seeing these severe side effects in people. We should be cautious of dismissing such a prevalent parasite.”

Related on SmartPlanet:

via: The Atlantic

photo: Top photo: Cat (Lmbuga/Wikimedia); Bottom photo: Toxoplasma Gondii (Daniel Mietchen/Wikimedia)

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Laura Shin

About Laura Shin

Laura Shin is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Laura Shin

Laura Shin

Contributing Editor

Laura Shin has written for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Los Angeles Times, Audubon and SolveClimate.com. She is currently a senior editor at LearnVest.com. Previously, she worked at Newsweek, the New York Times and Wall Street Journal. She holds degrees from Stanford University and Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism.

Follow her on Twitter.

Laura Shin

Laura Shin

In the unlikely event that Laura has a professional or financial relationship with a company she writes about, it will be prominently disclosed.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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-4 Votes
+ -
Voodoo sciene.
This blog is irresponsible and grasping. Shin, in quoting Webster, "may not want to cause any panic," but surely will to the detriment of felines and their owners. Those affected will exhibit sublte shifts in behavior? Who doesn't from morning to night and day to day? Sensationalist hogwash.
Posted by bistiboomer
19th Mar 2012
+5 Votes
+ -
It's only as sensationalist as you take it to be.
There's an awful lot of science in the above summary, in the original article and of course in the research itself. If you think it's hogwash, you'll have to back it up with more than a tossed-off dismissal.
Posted by andrew.nusca
19th Mar 2012
+2 Votes
+ -
Open mind receives knowledge
Agree w/ Andrew. Not sensationalist if it's true. It's not like a conspiracy theorist making wild associations where none exist.

Also see: http://www.radiolab.org/2009/sep/07/
Third story, "The Scratch" if you're focused. This article instantly made me recall this radio show from 2.5 years ago. /shudder
Posted by Solenoid
20th Mar 2012
-1 Votes
+ -
the litter box parasite is not new research
oh pleaze....

all parasites and diseases will cause problems for their hosts in one way or another, and many of them are shared between animals and humans.

hell, our regular ingestion of food and sexual indiscretions causes problems like erratic behaviors, dual personalities, greed, depression, loss of smell, taste and common sense, etc, etc, etc,....

hell, the bacteria in ones mouth can cause an array of problems, especially when the saliva is ingested or passed on through kissing.

to focus on cats and one type of parasite resulting from litter boxes, is not really research, especially when this particular parasite has already been known by the medical profession for many years.
Posted by databaseben
19th Mar 2012
+5 Votes
+ -
Interesting Behaviour
This interesting in that a parasite can cause changes in its host to do non survival actions. Most of these puppet master parasites seem to be found in insects like ants. I read about a sheep's blood fluke that infects ants and takes control of them by making them climb to the top of grass leaves and wait to get eaten by a sheep, where the blood fluke reproduces itself. Another parasite is a fungus that makes the ant climb a tree and bite down on a twig when the sun is the highest with the fungus breaking out of the ant's head and dropping spores onto the ground to be picked up by another ant.
Posted by sboverie
19th Mar 2012
+3 Votes
+ -
There are others
One I know of is a fungus that infects houseflies, making them (male or female) adopt a mating stance in death so that other flies will be coated in spores when they try to mate with the fungus-bloated corpse. I hate flies lol...

I also read an interesting theory that our evolution is partly governed by the action of viruses, which are capable of slicing off bits of DNA and carrying them to another species, where they insert them and change that species.
The theory held that, instead of the virus being a malicious thing that tried to hurt you (I've always wondered about that. Harming the host is not a good survival technique for a parasite.), instead it is trying to CHANGE you so that you can tolerate it, and your children can carry it without any ill effect.

DNA is simply a chemical, as are viruses. Tiny crystals... We all are at the whim of our chemical nature anyway, our moods are governed by the chemicals in our bloodstream and even something as simple as a cup of coffee could in theory mean the difference between being run over by a bus and a miraculous escape, so its no real surprise to me.

Its just the sheer scale, I had no idea that 2bn of us carried Toxo, or that it was as significant a disease as Malaria.
Posted by SiO2
Updated - 20th Mar 2012
+2 Votes
+ -
Inter Species Negotiation
There is a theory that bacteria and viruses are negotiating with the hosts. Some parasites are very aggressive and kill their hosts fast to return to the soil to infect the next host and increase its territory (this is anthrax). We all have a huge number of bacteria and viruses in our intestinal tracts that help us digest our food, E. Coli is one of the bacteria although not all E. Coli is beneficial, E. Coli poisoning comes from fecal contamination by other animals; this is a partial negotiation.

A real strange bit is something I read about a flea circus operator. It takes someone about 6 months or so to train fleas to do things like pull tiny carts and other acts in a flea circus. The weird part is that the life of a flea is just a few weeks but it takes 6 months to train the fleas. What I think is going on is a negotiation where the fleas are given food (the flea circus operator typically lets the fleas feed on their arm) and protection which is a big part of the survival needs for fleas. The fleas in turn are able to perform and make money for the operator.
Posted by sboverie
20th Mar 2012
0 Votes
+ -
I-S-N
Someone MUST have written a Science Fiction story about that, by now!
Posted by FiOS-Dave
11th Apr 2012
-6
cats
Posted by pauc1  |  Below your threshold
+2 Votes
+ -
cats
Another cat hater heard from! Ah hope yer dawg bahts yoo!
Posted by bootle1947
19th Mar 2012
+1 Vote
+ -
Not just cats...
What do we get from DOGS?
Posted by ka5s@...
19th Mar 2012
0 Votes
+ -
What we get from dogs
Unconditional love, slobbering, leg humping, Frisbie catchers, and unfortunately, Rabies.
Posted by FiOS-Dave
11th Apr 2012
+3 Votes
+ -
The Black Death
On of the contributing causes of the Black Death (Plague) in Europe during the 14th century was the common belief among Christians (Catholics) that cats were in league with the Devil. Cats were therefore not kept and the mouse population was allowed to expand. I wouldn't be too fast to deep six our cats now.
Posted by xrayangiodoc
19th Mar 2012
0 Votes
+ -
Bless our cat!
For the past nine years (since we adopted a kitty) our house has been devoid of flies, spiders, earwigs, and other crawly things that my aging eyes can no longer see.
Posted by FiOS-Dave
11th Apr 2012
0 Votes
+ -
toxo (the nikname)
Another weak article; how about discussing the ways of diagnosis, are they cheap, would a Dr. Rx it for folks like us. Meow?
Posted by affordablecomputerguy@...
19th Mar 2012
+1 Vote
+ -
Interesting and balanced
I aim to learn something new and significant every day and this story really gripped me. But I hope that if it goes (excuse the pun) viral, it doesn't lead to a cat massacre.
Posted by Shadeburst
20th Mar 2012
+2 Votes
+ -
Cat Massacre
That would be a cat astrophe...Sorry, I just couldn't help it
(and, no, the cat didn't get my tongue)
Posted by FiOS-Dave
11th Apr 2012
-2 Votes
+ -
Toxo indication in schizophrenia and other conditions.
Nuts. I have handled and rescued cats for many years. I currently feed 5 house cats plus 3 that remain too feral for me to bring in (they were trapped, vaccinated, sterilized and dewormed but had to be released due to howling and terrifying little children). Nobody has more money invested in cats, dogs, unwanted animals of all sorts than I do without going non-profit. I have emptied thousands or maybe even hundreds of thousands of pounds of cat litter. I have been bit, clawed, salivated on reguarly. I may or may not have toxo. I was crazy about animals long before anybody was concerned with toxo but did know to wash my hands throughly after handling dirty materials of all sorts. If I had developed a personality defect my family would have immediately alerted me to this fact. So far, their chief complaint is that I don't make peach cobbler often enough. I realize that one case of non issue with toxo does not reverse an entire study but I would like to point out that no other scientists are working on proving or refuting this version of science. Until then I am a disbeliever.
Posted by IMWeira
20th Mar 2012
+1 Vote
+ -
Spoken like a true Luddite.
"I would like to point out that no other scientists are working on proving or refuting this version of science." is the weakest argument for refutation I can imagine. Nearly every discovery you can name was made because no one else (scientist or otherwise) thought to examine a particular phenomenon. Facts tend to trump opinion and wishful thinking.
Posted by decryobliviots
20th Mar 2012
0 Votes
+ -
Peach Cobbler Disease
Yes, you have been infected! The proof is in the reseaerch being done at the Duncan Hines Institute for Cobblerites, although another fine institution denounces their results, saying "It's a Crocker..."
Posted by FiOS-Dave
11th Apr 2012
0 Votes
+ -
Is this the long sought after link...
Is this the long sought after missing link between Women and Cats? The reason(s) that they are so similar in that we identify women with cats and men with dogs?
Posted by josephhyde@...
20th Mar 2012
0 Votes
+ -
cats
Read the article, it states that there is only a short period when while the cat is young when this spreads. I wonder if a course of anti-biotics would have any effect? Also, the anti-psychotics, did that work as an anti-biotic in the petri dish? Would that have any hope of a medicine that had less side effects because it wouldn't seek to modify behavior?
Posted by garyfizer@...
21st Mar 2012
-1 Votes
+ -
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2nd Apr 2012
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Posted by linzhanap
2nd Apr 2012
0 Votes
+ -
Behaviour & mcroorganisms
Increasingly, we find that the microorganisms which inhabit and in fact make up the bulk of most 'complex' organisms exert far more control over our behavior than we previously realized...from our food selections to our mate selections.

Given the wide range of organisms and possible reactions identifying any particular behavior to a particular organism may or may not be possible--and there will be interactions between such organisms.

Reductionist science (holding all but one variable stationary,) has distinct limits in investigating the universe--there are far more actions which are the result of multiple variables than there are that result from single variables.

Computer simulations are beginning to make it possible to investigate the huge multiple of interactions involved in any natural process--and are, in fact, probably the only way to reasonably investigate them at this time.

Humans prefer simple answers, but many events have no single answer, much less a single simple answer

The simplest answer is to pass everything off as 'fate' or 'God's Will,' both of which translate directly to 'I don't know.'

The scientific method is not magic. It's not even complicated.

It consists of doing things, observing what happens, formulating a predictive formula and testing to see if that formula is accurate. It is no more, nor less complex than determining the proper temperature to hard-cook an egg by making many of them at slightly different temperatures and deciding which are 'best' under whatever criteria you judge them.

But as the number of variables increase, so do the number of tests. The 'right' temperature for a freshly laid chicken egg may not be the correct temperature for a 2 week old egg, or a duck or other species egg, air pressure and composition might play a part as could any other element of the environment. Testing for each of these and their combinations rapidly becomes too complex to determine experimentally by changing only one variable at a time, and requires the development of valid rules which determine how substances react under different conditions.

Not only do different microorganisms behave differently, but they behave differently when associated with other microorganisms. Or in small numbers. Or in large numbers. Or in the blood rather than the gut....and many many other variations.
Posted by wizoddg
16th Aug
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