Literature DB >> 22309598

Why infest the loved ones--inherent human behaviour indicates former mutualism with head lice.

Lajos Rózsa1, Péter Apari.   

Abstract

Head lice transmit to new hosts when people lean their heads together. Humans frequently touch their heads to express friendship or love, while this behaviour is absent in apes. We hypothesize that this behaviour was adaptive because it enabled people to acquire head lice infestations as early as possible to provoke an immune response effective against both head lice and body lice throughout the subsequent periods of their life. This cross-immunity could provide some defence against the body-louse-borne lethal diseases like epidemic typhus, trench fever, relapsing fever and the classical plague. Thus the human 'touching heads' behaviour probably acts as an inherent and unconscious 'vaccination' against body lice to reduce the threat exposed by the pathogens they may transmit. Recently, the eradication of body-louse-borne diseases rendered the transmission of head lice a maladaptive, though still widespread, behaviour in developed societies.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22309598     DOI: 10.1017/S0031182012000017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Parasitology        ISSN: 0031-1820            Impact factor:   3.234


  3 in total

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Authors:  Yi-Tian Fu; Chaoqun Yao; Yuan-Ping Deng; Hany M Elsheikha; Renfu Shao; Xing-Quan Zhu; Guo-Hua Liu
Journal:  Infect Dis Poverty       Date:  2022-05-26       Impact factor: 10.485

3.  Perpetuation of Borreliae.

Authors:  Sam R Telford Iii; Heidi K Goethert
Journal:  Curr Issues Mol Biol       Date:  2020-12-10       Impact factor: 2.081

  3 in total

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