Current:Home > NewsYou asked: Can we catch a new virus from a pet? A cat-loving researcher has an answer -ChatGPT
You asked: Can we catch a new virus from a pet? A cat-loving researcher has an answer
View
Date:2025-04-25 21:00:13
"Get ready for a silly question," one reader wrote in response to our series on "hidden viruses" that jump from animals to people.
"I love my pups very much – and I think they love me too because I get lots of kisses. Is that bad from a spillover virus perspective – for me or my dogs? Should I train my pups to be less ... kissy? That's gonna be tough. I may just accept the risk :)"
This question isn't silly, at all. The vast majority of time that you get sick, you''re infected by another human. But that's not always the case. You can absolutely catch viruses from your pets, including dogs and cats.
And it isn't just from getting pet kisses. If you're physically close with your dog or cat – like snuggling on the couch together or sleeping in the same room, you're exposed to their viruses even without the saliva directly on your face. So kissing isn't really adding that much more exposure.
One virologist tried to figure out what new viruses his own cats might be carrying. "One of them likes to sleep on my head," says John Lednicky, who's at the University of Florida.
And he wasn't disappointed.
For years, Lednicky had a cat named Gibbs. "He was named after the singer Barry Gibb." And Gibbs loved to bring Lednicky "gifts."
"He used to bring me presents every single day. Rodents. Half-eaten rabbits. Snakes, birds, frogs. He was also making friends with opossums, too. So who knows what viruses my cat might be bringing into our home."
Lednicky's cat had a few ticks. "My backyard is full of raccoons and deer, which carry ticks," he says. He plucked a few ticks off the cat and took them into his lab and looked to see what viruses lurked inside.
"I pulled out Heartland virus from the ticks," he says. Scientists first identified Heartland virus back in 2012 in Missouri. Although thought to be rare in the U.S. the virus can cause a serious illness that can require hospitalization.
According to the Centers for Disease and Prevention, the U.S. has recorded about 60 cases of Heartland virus – and none in Florida. But Lednicky thinks some people in the state have probably caught Heartland, perhaps from ticks on their pets. "It's probably been diagnosed as a flu or something else," he says. Lednicky doesn't think Heartland is a major concern in Florida. He just thinks it's a bit more widespread than previously thought. "Just because I found it doesn't mean it's a problem." It just means some cases are going undetected.
Of course, dogs carry ticks, too. And they can also carry some interesting viruses.
As we explained in a previous article in our series, scientists think a new coronavirus – found in Arkansas, Haiti, Malaysia and Thailand – likely jumps from dogs into people.
"The virus probably circulates widely around the world, but no one has paid attention to it," Lednicky says. And if you've been around dogs frequently, he says, you might have caught this virus, which has a very technical name: CCoV-HuPn-2018.
But that doesn't mean you necessarily fell ill. The vast majority of time, these viruses from your pets don't make you very sick or even sick at all. For example, the new coronavirus that Lednicky cited may cause pneumonia in younger children but, in adults, it causes only mild symptoms, which resemble a cold or mild flu, or no symptoms at all. So you wouldn't probably even realize your dog infected you.
And as Lednicky points out, being exposed to viruses from your dogs, such as the new coronavirus, probably gives you immunity to that virus and similar ones.
Also, what viruses your pets have depends largely on their behavior. If your cat or dog is a homebody, who eats mostly from a can or bag stored in the kitchen, then they will likely not be infected with Heartland virus or some other exotic virus – except, that is, for the viruses you bring into the home.
Yes, we spill over our viruses to animals all the time, Lednicky says. It's called reverse spillover or reverse zoonosis. People don't realize how often we, the humans, pass along viruses to our pets, Lednicky says. "We don't understand reverse zoonosis well."
Take for instance, he says, what happens to cats after graduate students have parties at the University of Florida.
"I hear the same story over and over again from grad students: 'We had a party and my cat is now hiding in the closet," Lednicky explains, seemingly because the large number of people freaked out the cat.
"I always ask, 'How do you know your cat's not sick?' Sick cats hide because they don't want other members of the species to see them as weak."
And so, finally, Lednicky tested his hypothesis. He took samples from a hiding cat and tested it. "The cat turned out to have influenza virus – a human influenza."
veryGood! (7683)
Related
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- 2 models of Apple Watch can go on sale again, for now, after court lifts halt over a patent dispute
- Shakira celebrates unveiling of 21-foot bronze statue of her in Colombian hometown
- US announces new weapons package for Ukraine, as funds dwindle and Congress is stalled on aid bill
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Myopia affects 4 in 10 people and may soon affect 5 in 10. Here's what it is and how to treat it.
- Prominent Republican Georgia lawmaker Barry Fleming appointed to judgeship
- 'I thought it was a scam': Michigan man's losing lottery ticket wins him $100,000
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Colorado man sentenced in Nevada power plant fire initially described as terror attack
Ranking
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Fox News Radio and sports reporter Matt Napolitano dead at 33 from infection, husband says
- Flag football gives female players sense of community, scholarship options and soon shot at Olympics
- Teddi Mellencamp Gets Shoulder Skin Cut Out in Surgery Amid Cancer Battle
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- North Korea’s Kim vows to bolster war readiness to repel ‘unprecedented’ US-led confrontations
- Shakira’s hometown unveils a giant statue of the beloved Colombian pop star
- How a construction worker impaled on the job was saved by EMS workers
Recommendation
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
An Indiana dog spent 1,129 days in a shelter. He has his own place with DOGTV.
Travis Kelce Shares How He Plans to Shake Off Chiefs' Embarrassing Christmas Day Loss
Gaston Glock, the Austrian developer of the Glock handgun, dies at 94
Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
Hong Kong man jailed for 6 years after pleading guilty to a terrorism charge over a foiled bomb plot
In its 75th year, the AP Top 25 men’s basketball poll is still driving discussion across the sport
Lee Sun-kyun, star of Oscar-winning film 'Parasite,' found dead in South Korea