Your brain might be eating itself and you'd never know, hey?
Okay, so I just read something this morning that made me spit out my coffee, and I drink a lot of coffee, hey. Turns out, that whole "brain-eating amoeba" thing? The one everyone freaks out about in warm lakes? Yeah, that's not the only one. There's another brain-eating virus, called JC polyomavirus, and get this: you're probably already infected with it. Like, right now. Just carrying it around. And it's not just people with super weak immune systems who get sick from it, like we used to think. It can just... activate. And then, well, then it's not good. It can lead to something called Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy, or PML, which sounds terrifying because it is.
### A Virus in Your Head
So, the researchers are saying this virus, which a lot of people carry silently, can cause this fatal brain infection called PML. They used to think it only happened if your immune system was profoundly suppressed, like after an organ transplant or with certain diseases. But new studies are showing it's more complicated. Essentially, the virus can just hang out in your body, dormant, probably for years. And then, for reasons they're still figuring out, it can decide to wake up and attack your brain. It's like having a tiny, invisible, incredibly rude houseguest that might decide to redecorate your entire living room with a sledgehammer. And the living room is your brain, hey.
* You're likely already infected.
* It's usually dormant but can activate.
* Can lead to a fatal brain infection.
* Not just for people with profoundly suppressed immune systems anymore.
It's wild to think about, isn't it? We worry about so many things out here in Winterpeg — the potholes on Portage, that first big snowfall in October, whether the Jets will finally make it all the way. But something like this, a silent little invader that could just decide to go rogue, makes you realize there's a whole other layer of stuff happening inside us that we just don't think about, hey. Makes you want to go take a walk by the Red River and just appreciate the big, open sky.
Winterpeg. We built a city in the coldest place anyone has any business building a city — and it is genuinely wonderful. Good morning.
The crew on the Morning Wire talks about this kinda wild stuff every day. Catch them live at mornings.live.