An international team of scientists prove that being a part of #Catset makes you frail

8WON6

The Great Negro
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By Lisa Marshall • Published: Nov. 6, 2023
A common, cat-borne parasite already associated with risk-taking behavior and mental illness in humans may also contribute to exhaustion, loss of muscle mass, and other signs of “frailty” in older adults, suggests a study published Nov. 6 in the Journal of Gerontology: Medical Science.
The research, by an international team of scientists including University of Colorado Boulder, University of Maryland School of Medicine and the University of A Coruña in Spain, is the latest to explore how the tiny, single-celled organism Toxoplasma gondii (T. gondii) could have big impacts on human health.



An illustration of the life cycle of Toxoplasma gondii



“We often think of T. gondii infection as relatively asymptomatic, but this study highlights that for some people it may have significant health consequences later on,” said co-author Christopher Lowry, a professor in the Department of Integrative Physiology at CU Boulder.
Approximately 11% to 15% of people in the U.S. have been infected with T. gondii at some point and rates tend to be far higher in older individuals. In some countries, more than 65% have been infected. Once infected, people can unknowingly harbor the parasite for life.
For the study, the team examined the blood of 601 Spanish and Portuguese adults over age 65, along with measures of a common geriatric syndrome known as “frailty” – which includes unintentional weight loss, tiredeness, loss of cognitive sharpness and other indications of declining health.
A whopping 67% of study subjects were “seropositive” showing markers in their blood of a latent infection.
The researchers did not, as they originally hypothesized, find an association between any infection to T. gondii and frailty. But they did find that, among those infected, those with higher “serointensity” or a higher concentration of antibodies to the parasite, were significantly more likely to be frail.
Higher serointensity could reflect a more virulent or widespread infection, multiple infections or recent reactivation of a latent infection, the authors said.
“This paper is important because it provides, for the first time, evidence of the existence of a link between frailty in older adults and intensity of the response to T. gondii infection,” said co-author Blanca Laffon, a professor of psychobiology at the Interdisciplinary Centre of Chemistry and Biology at University of A Coruña.
checkmate
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Nokids

Promise if I have a seed imma guide him right
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Just rescued a kitten and other than cleaning the litter box, feeding him, playing with him he’s low maintenance. Plus the bytches love it. All you gotta do is wear gloves and wash ya hands
 

Premeditated

MANDE KANG
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IMMIGRANT TETHERS
common sense would tell you grown men who owns a damn housecat would be more mentally weak and have probably never won a fight

there's a reason wo associate single women with cats

only on here would you see grown men trying to champion cats as better and more useful bets than dogs

these softies have cats for only companionship :mjlol:

#p*ssyset lose again
 
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