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Parasitic manipulation or side effects? The effects of past Toxoplasma gondii and Borrelia spp. infections on human personality and cognitive performance are not mediated by impaired health
J. Flegr, J. Ullmann, J. Toman
Language English Country Czech Republic
Document type Journal Article
NLK
Free Medical Journals
from 1966
ProQuest Central
from 2004-01-01 to 3 months ago
Health & Medicine (ProQuest)
from 2004-01-01 to 3 months ago
Public Health Database (ProQuest)
from 2004-01-01 to 3 months ago
ROAD: Directory of Open Access Scholarly Resources
from 1982
PubMed
38084079
DOI
10.14411/fp.2023.020
Knihovny.cz E-resources
- MeSH
- Borrelia * MeSH
- Borrelia Infections * complications MeSH
- Cognition MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Personality MeSH
- Toxoplasma * MeSH
- Toxoplasmosis * complications MeSH
- Animals MeSH
- Check Tag
- Humans MeSH
- Animals MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
Bacteria Borrelia burgdorferi s. l. and even more the protist Toxoplasma gondii Nicolle et Manceaux, 1908, are known to affect the behaviour and mental health of their animal and human hosts. Both pathogens infect a significant fraction of human population, both are neurotropic and survive in the host's body for a long time. While latent infections were thought to be clinically asymptomatic, recent studies suggest otherwise, revealing adverse effects on human health. It was hypothesised that the specific behavioural effects of these pathogens may be side effects of general health impairments in infected individuals. This hypothesis was tested using about one hour-long survey consisting of questionnaires and performance tests on a cohort of 7,762 members of the internet population. Results showed that individuals infected with T. gondii reported worse physical and mental health, and those infected with Borrelia spp. reported worse physical health than uninfected controls. Furthermore, infected and noninfected individuals differed in several personality traits, including conscientiousness, pathogen disgust, injury disgust, Machiavellianism, narcissism, tribalism, anti-authoritarianism, intelligence, reaction time, and precision. While the majority of behavioural effects associated with Borrelia infection were similar to those associated with Toxoplasma infection, some differences were observed, such as performance in the Stroop test. Path analyses and nonparametric partial Kendall correlation tests showed that these effects were not mediated by impaired health in infected individuals, contradicting the side effects hypothesis.
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