This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Wayt Gibbs. Got a minute?
A bad infection can make you delirious.
But the mind clears once the germs are gone. Usually.
Not so when researchers recently injected mice with Toxoplasma gondii.
This parasitic protozoan only gets amorous inside the gut of a cat.
The resulting fertilized eggs wind up in a litter box.
Their challenge is to grow up and get back inside a feline.
The solution: get eaten by a mouse that gets eaten by a cat.
The expelled eggs wait until they become a meal for a mouse.
The parasites then move to the mouse's brain.
Where they stop the rodent from fearing the smell of cat urine.
The delirious mouse approaches Fluffy and, voila, the parasite finds its way home.
In past trials, mice almost always died of this kind of infection.
This study used weaker strains of Toxo and the mice recovered,
but they stayed blasé about the cat smell.
That a curable infection can cause permanent behavior changes is worrisome
because this same parasite infects 60 million people in the U.S.alone.
Most cases produce no symptoms.
But some evidence links chronic infection to schizophrenia and a cluster of other mental illnesses, known unscientifically as "crazy cat lady syndrome."
Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Wayt Gibbs.
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