00:00:00
Alzheimer's, Parkinson's,
00:00:01
and dementia are some of
00:00:02
the most tragic consequences of aging.
00:00:04
And we’ve had to accept them as inevitable,
00:00:06
because we’ve had no other choice.
00:00:08
But that might be changing,
00:00:09
because these conditions
could have a surprising cause:
00:00:12
common infections like the flu.
00:00:14
In other words,
00:00:15
these diseases may not be
something we have to accept
00:00:17
as part of getting older --
00:00:19
we might be able to prevent them.
00:00:20
Now, to be clear, the flu virus does not
00:00:23
suddenly give people Alzheimer’s.
00:00:25
It gives people the flu.
00:00:26
And Alzheimer’s is not infectious.
00:00:28
You can’t catch Alzheimer’s
00:00:30
the way you can catch the flu or mono.
00:00:32
That’s because Alzheimer’s,
Parkinson’s, and dementia
00:00:34
all belong to a family of chronic diseases
00:00:37
that are caused by a build-up of protein gunk
00:00:39
in our brain and nervous system.
00:00:41
They’re called neurodegenerative diseases,
00:00:43
or NDDs.
00:00:44
But when researchers look back into history,
00:00:46
they start to see some odd trends.
00:00:48
A few years after big virus outbreaks
00:00:50
like the 1918 flu pandemic,
00:00:52
they would keep seeing surges
00:00:54
in “Parkinsonism,”
00:00:55
or symptoms like Parkinson’s.
00:00:57
Since then, a constellation of links
00:00:59
between infections and NDDs has been growing –
00:01:02
it seems like when a severe infection happens,
00:01:05
an NDD becomes more likely to follow.
00:01:08
But those links are both really
hard to pin down and hotly debated.
00:01:12
Here's how we're connecting the dots and maybe,
00:01:14
just maybe,
00:01:15
kicking some of our most devastating diseases to
00:01:18
the curb.
[INTRO]
00:01:22
Establishing for sure that the flu or mono
00:01:25
causes Alzheimer's is super
ridiculously difficult.
00:01:28
Like I said, the flu virus causes the flu,
00:01:30
the mono virus causes mono,
00:01:32
and the shingles virus causes shingles.
00:01:34
Well, and chickenpox.
00:01:35
So saying they also cause Alzheimer’s
00:01:38
might seem like a totally wild take.
00:01:40
We’ll get to how it might happen in a little bit,
00:01:43
but the main thing epidemiologists want to see is:
00:01:46
Does X cause Y?
00:01:47
They can worry about the
how once they know the what.
00:01:51
And, yes, viral infections might cause NDDs.
00:01:55
At least, an association between the two
00:01:57
is starting to show up everywhere you look.
00:01:59
So far, the links are still fuzzy.
00:02:01
But there are very specific elements researchers
00:02:04
know to look for in order to prove
00:02:06
that a specific factor causes a specific disease.
00:02:09
The first thing you have to
do is nail down the timeline.
00:02:12
It seems obvious,
00:02:13
but historically,
00:02:14
one of the most important and challenging parts
00:02:16
of figuring out whether infections cause NDDs
00:02:19
has been establishing that people
00:02:20
had the viruses first.
00:02:22
Because we can’t say viruses
00:02:23
are causing NDDs if the patients
00:02:26
already had Alzheimer’s
00:02:27
before they got infected.
00:02:29
That isn’t how time works.
00:02:30
Luckily, figuring this out got a whole lot easier
00:02:33
with the rise of electronic health records.
00:02:35
In 2023, a study published in the journal Cell
00:02:38
analyzed health records
00:02:39
from over three hundred thousand people
00:02:42
thanks to a massive database in Finland.
00:02:44
That’s a lot of people.
00:02:47
They identified patients with
a bunch of different NDDs —
00:02:50
Alzheimer’s, dementia,
Parkinson’s, ALS, and so on.
00:02:53
Then, the researchers looked up to 15 years back
00:02:56
in their record for any severe viral infections.
00:02:59
We’re talking flu, mono, pneumonia, herpes,
00:03:01
stomach viruses, shingles, and more.
00:03:03
Then they compared that group
00:03:05
to people who also had an infection
00:03:07
but were never diagnosed with an NDD.
00:03:09
The results were striking.
00:03:11
They found 45 viral exposures
00:03:13
which significantly increased risk
00:03:15
for developing an NDD in the future.
00:03:17
And that’s interesting.
00:03:18
But if the research team stopped there,
00:03:20
their results probably
wouldn’t be super trustworthy.
00:03:23
See, both these infections, like flu,
00:03:25
and many NDDs, like Alzheimer’s,
00:03:28
are all really common.
00:03:29
And when you take a bunch of really common things
00:03:32
and do some statistics at them,
00:03:34
the math is sometimes going to come up as a match
00:03:36
by pure, random chance.
00:03:38
A tiny bit like those infinite monkeys
coming up with the text of Hamlet.
00:03:42
It’ll happen eventually.
00:03:43
In statistics, this practice is called “fishing”
00:03:45
because you’re casting a really wide
net to “fish” for significant results.
00:03:50
That means some of those 45 associations
00:03:52
were probably not actually real.
00:03:54
So, the team turned to a different
huge database of health records,
00:03:58
this one from the UK.
00:03:59
They successfully reproduced
00:04:01
22 of the original 45 associations
00:04:03
from that dataset,
00:04:04
suggesting there might well be something to them.
00:04:07
The strongest association was
between viral encephalitis,
00:04:10
a virus causing inflammation
in the brain, and Alzheimer’s.
00:04:13
It showed that being hospitalized
00:04:15
with encephalitis increased someone’s risk
00:04:18
for developing Alzheimer’s by 22 to 30 times.
00:04:21
Reproducing their findings with data
00:04:23
from a different country is a great start,
00:04:25
but what is maybe even more persuasive
00:04:27
is the number of other researchers
00:04:29
that have independently
come to the same conclusion
00:04:31
about viruses and NDDs.
00:04:33
Researchers have found similar links
00:04:35
between mono and multiple sclerosis,
00:04:37
mono and Alzheimer’s, and flu and Parkinson’s.
00:04:40
So, the evidence is building for links
00:04:42
between viruses and neurodegeneration,
00:04:45
but that’s still not rock solid proof
00:04:47
that viruses are causing neurodegeneration.
00:04:51
It’s just that this connection
is really hard to study.
00:04:54
These NDDs seem to pop up
00:04:55
between 1 and 15 years
00:04:57
after the infection.
00:04:58
That’s a long time to keep track
00:05:00
of hundreds of thousands of people.
00:05:01
The gold standard of proof
00:05:02
would be some kind of clinical
trial where we’d find people,
00:05:05
infect them with a virus,
00:05:07
and then watch them in a controlled environment
00:05:09
to see if they develop Parkinson’s or something.
00:05:11
And while a study like that has actually
00:05:13
been done successfully in rats,
00:05:15
you cannot do that in people and should not try.
00:05:18
So public health researchers
instead use real world data
00:05:21
to make observations.
00:05:23
For instance, several studies have shown
00:05:25
that getting vaccinated for the
flu, shingles, and pneumonia
00:05:28
can reduce the risk of developing
00:05:30
Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s.
00:05:31
That tells us a few important things.
00:05:33
First, while vaccines don’t
prevent all cases of infection,
00:05:36
they can dramatically reduce the
severity of those infections.
00:05:40
And that’s important, because that big study
00:05:43
we were talking about earlier with
hundreds of thousands of people —
00:05:46
that was looking at hospital data.
00:05:48
And since you usually don’t
check into the hospital
00:05:51
when you have the flu,
00:05:52
that means we’re talking about severe infections.
00:05:55
Vaccines are available for several of the viruses
00:05:58
they looked at including
flu, shingles, and pneumonia.
00:06:01
And they’ve all been shown
00:06:02
to reduce infection severity
00:06:04
or rates of hospitalization.
00:06:06
So it could be getting severe infections
00:06:09
leads to higher odds of
developing an NDD later in life.
00:06:12
It also means we may be able to
prevent people from developing NDDs
00:06:16
with a few safe, routine shots.
00:06:19
So the question remains,
00:06:20
if viruses cause NDDs,
00:06:22
why and how do they do that?
00:06:25
Why would a stomach virus so nasty
00:06:27
you end up in the hospital cause problems
00:06:29
for your brain?
00:06:31
And not right away,
00:06:32
but 15 years later?
00:06:33
Having a plausible explanation
is not strictly necessary
00:06:36
for establishing that viruses cause NDDs,
00:06:39
but it does make researchers’ job easier
00:06:42
when you get to the prevention part.
00:06:43
So, to start off,
00:06:44
it’s not unheard of for viruses
00:06:46
to cause a chronic, non-infectious disease.
00:06:48
Human papillomavirus is well known to
cause cervical cancer, for example.
00:06:54
But we’re looking at a
bunch of different viruses –
00:06:56
flu, shingles, mono, herpes —
00:06:59
leading to a bunch of similar NDDs.
00:07:02
It’s weird that they seem
to end up in the same place.
00:07:05
It could happen a bunch of ways and
might be different for each virus,
00:07:08
but here are two of the explanations
researchers have put forward.
00:07:11
First, remember that all NDDs are caused
00:07:14
by a build-up of protein
gunk in our nervous system.
00:07:17
And second, all of these
viruses can be neurotropic,
00:07:20
meaning they can enter and infect cells
00:07:22
in our brain and nervous system.
00:07:24
Of particular note is herpes, or HSV-1.
00:07:27
Over 60% of the adult population in the US
00:07:29
is estimated to have herpes.
00:07:32
Most of the time you hear about herpes
00:07:33
it’s because of the painful
sores it can periodically cause
00:07:36
on people’s lips and eyes.
00:07:38
In between flare-ups,
00:07:39
the herpes virus lays dormant
00:07:41
in our peripheral nervous system.
00:07:43
Tons of things, from stress to sunlight —
00:07:45
and even other infections —
00:07:47
can reactivate the virus,
producing more baby viruses
00:07:50
that travel down to the
skin and cause sores again.
00:07:53
But those new viruses can also
migrate the other direction
00:07:57
from the nerves in our skin up to the brain.
00:08:00
HSV-1 infections in the brain are
usually completely asymptomatic,
00:08:04
but even mild brain infections
00:08:06
can be harmful and HSV-1 seems to linger …
00:08:10
forever.
00:08:10
And in mice, anytime those
dormant viruses re-activate,
00:08:14
they for some reason ramp up
production of the same toxic proteins
00:08:18
that make up the plaques in Alzheimer’s patients,
00:08:21
essentially accelerating neurodegeneration.
00:08:23
Since both herpes and all
those other viruses are common,
00:08:27
severe bouts with the flu or shingles
00:08:29
may be repeatedly triggering
mild herpes infections
00:08:33
in the brain,
00:08:34
which could help explain why NDDs
00:08:36
are correlated with so many different viruses.
00:08:39
So… it’s all herpes’ fault.
00:08:41
Maybe.
00:08:42
The other proposed mechanism
00:08:43
has to do with the molecular cause of NDDs.
00:08:46
One thing viruses and NDDs have in common
00:08:49
is that they both make big
protein complexes in our cells.
00:08:53
For viruses, those complexes are new baby viruses,
00:08:56
but in NDDs they’re globs of smaller proteins
00:09:00
all stuck together in our nervous system.
00:09:02
For viruses to replicate,
00:09:03
they need to hijack our cellular machinery
00:09:05
to assemble new viruses.
00:09:07
But it’s possible the changes they make
00:09:09
to our cellular machinery
00:09:11
could linger even
00:09:12
after the viruses stop replicating.
00:09:14
The faulty cellular machinery could,
00:09:16
you might say, get confused.
00:09:18
It’s now programmed to assemble proteins
00:09:21
into new viruses,
00:09:22
but it’s all out of virus.
00:09:23
Instead, they might accidentally start
00:09:25
globbing human proteins together…
00:09:27
improperly creating those
harmful plaques that cause NDDs.
00:09:31
One study,
00:09:32
which hasn’t been through
the peer review process yet
00:09:34
as we’re writing this,
00:09:35
does present some early
evidence supporting this idea.
00:09:38
The study shows that a drug
00:09:39
that was originally designed to
interrupt the assembly of HIV viruses
00:09:43
can also slow the assembly of
plaques in patients with ALS.
00:09:47
So, maybe those plaques
00:09:49
are being put together in a similar way,
00:09:51
and the drug is resetting the faulty machinery.
00:09:54
These ideas require further study,
00:09:56
but they lend some weight to the notion
00:09:58
that viruses are causing NDDs.
00:10:00
All in all, while it’s still up in the air,
00:10:01
the growing body of research
00:10:03
certainly checks a lot of the
boxes epidemiologists look for
00:10:07
when declaring a “causative relationship.”
00:10:09
And we might get clarity on this
relationship in the coming years.
00:10:12
The world is reeling from the COVID-19 pandemic
00:10:15
caused by SARS-CoV-2,
00:10:17
a virus that can infect the brain.
00:10:19
And if severe viral infections
really do cause NDDs,
00:10:22
then we would expect
00:10:23
to see an uptick in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s
00:10:26
over the next 10 to 15 years.
00:10:27
Some papers suggest it’s already happening,
00:10:29
but like all science,
00:10:31
we need to wait for many researchers
00:10:33
to come to that same conclusion
00:10:34
before we make that call.
00:10:36
Time will tell.
Now maybe this seems like terrible news.
00:10:39
We all get the flu! We all get mono,
00:10:41
and we all get herpes!
00:10:43
So how does knowing they might be causing NDDs
00:10:46
make any difference?
00:10:47
Because knowing that viruses
00:10:48
may be partially causing some of the most
00:10:50
devastating diseases humans
00:10:52
experience empowers us to find solutions.
00:10:55
We’ve learned that vaccines for common viruses
00:10:57
seem to protect us from NDDs.
00:11:00
Those vaccines prevent severe infections,
00:11:02
and severity appears to be a factor.
00:11:04
There are also other ways
00:11:05
to reduce the severity of some infections –
00:11:08
like Tamiflu for flu, or Paxlovid for COVID-19.
00:11:12
And while not all of these viruses have
vaccines yet, they’re working on it.
00:11:16
For all of history, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s,
00:11:18
and dementia have felt like
almost unavoidable problems
00:11:21
we have to accept as we age.
00:11:23
What if that’s not the case?
00:11:24
What if these heartbreaking diseases
00:11:26
have such easy-to-tackle causes
00:11:28
that we could be on the
verge of getting rid of them…
00:11:31
at least some of them?
00:11:32
It’s not going to happen
next year, or in five years,
00:11:35
but if these associations with
infections turn out to be real,
00:11:39
we suddenly have a massive toolkit
00:11:42
for dealing with neurodegenerative diseases.
00:11:44
Vaccines and treatments
00:11:46
that we already know are safe and effective.
00:11:48
C’mon, science. Give us this one.
00:11:59
[ OUTRO ]