Discovery News
					Aug 21, 2012 03:00 AM ET 
by 
													
														
							
							
							Jennifer  
							Viegas 
					
THE GIST
    		- Cats have gotten a bad health rap, as new research suggests they may be beneficial to human health.
    		- Cats could even help to lower human risk of cancer.
    		- Cats may harbor T. gondii, but feline ownership does not predict risk of infection with this parasite.
    		News headlines over the past few years have linked cat 
ownership to everything from cancer to craziness, but new studies 
suggest that cats are actually beneficial to human health, and may even 
reduce our risk for cancer and other diseases.
    		Reports in this week's issue of Biology Letters, for example, 
counter the tabloid-suggested link between cats and human brain cancer.
    		Marion Vittecoq of the Tour du Valat research center and her 
colleagues conclude that cats should not be blamed for human cancer. In 
fact, studies show just the opposite.
    		Vittecoq told Discovery News that "according to our knowledge, 
studies that have focused on the link between cancer and cat ownership 
so far have found either no association at all or a reduced risk of 
cancer in cat owners."
    		
As an example, she and co-author Frédéric Thomas cite a 
National Institutes of Health Study by G.J. Tranah and colleagues. It 
found dog and cat owners have a reduced risk of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 
The longer the duration of pet ownership was, the less chance the 
individual would suffer from this type of cancer.
    		Why cats and dogs may benefit human health remains a mystery, 
but another study from earlier this month provides some intriguing 
clues. It found that infants having pets at home suffered from fewer 
respiratory tract illnesses.
    		"Our findings support the theory that during the first year of 
life, animal contacts are important, possibly leading to better 
resistance to infectious respiratory illnesses during childhood," wrote 
Eija Bergroth and colleagues in the paper, published in the journal 
Pediatrics.
    		Countless other studies demonstrate the mental health benefits 
of pet ownership, particularly for students, seniors and people with 
chronic illnesses. In such cases, pets can provide much needed comfort 
and companionship.
    		Cats have gotten a bad rap over the years, however, for a few 
different reasons. One is based on old ridiculous superstitions, such as
 how black cats are bad luck. The other, however, centers on a 
scientific debate concerning cancer and the protozoan parasite 
Toxoplasma gondii.
    		In earlier research, Vittecoq and Thomas determined that there 
is a positive correlation between this parasite and incidence of brain 
cancer. Cats can host this bug, and therein lies the "felines are bad 
for you" media frenzy over the past several months.
    		But the authors themselves indicate that cats have been 
mistakenly maligned, due to the other studies supporting the health 
benefits of cats, the fact that the connection between the parasite and 
cancer has still not been firmly established.
    		
Thomas explained that "humans usually get infected through the 
consumption of undercooked meat, especially sheep, containing asexual 
stages of 
T. gondii" or through contact with contaminated soil 
(which good hygiene remedies). Other studies show that ingestion of the 
bug in contaminated water, fruit, vegetables, and raw goat milk can lead
 to infection. The parasite is therefore somewhat similar to 
E. coli, in terms of transmission routes.
    		Victoria Benson of Oxford University's Cancer Epidemiology Unit, and her team also have a statement in the latest 
Biology Letters addressing this matter.
    		Benson and her team are conducting what's called the "Million 
Women Study," which investigates a tremendous amount of data concerning 
middle-aged women from the U.K. The scientists found zero association 
with incidence of brain cancer and women living with a cat.
    		"This, however, does not rule out the possibility that 
T. gondii infection from another source may be associated with brain cancer incidence," Benson and her team write.
    		If that other source, which may even be another parasite, is 
found, Thomas says it could "provide a means to reduce the risk of brain
 cancer, particularly in countries like France where the incidence of 
brain cancer and 
T. gondii are both high."
 
											
 
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