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Brain-Eating Amoeba Kills Woman After Using Neti Pot

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Natural Society

Every summer, the media reports on someone who died after being infected with a brain-eating amoeba. These cases usually occur after a person has visited a pool, waterpark, or a tepid lake. These horrifying infections are exceedingly rare, but they can still occur after a person comes into contact with the amoeba at home. Most recently, a woman died after inhaling a brain-eating amoeba from tap water she used in a Neti pot to irrigate her sinuses.

The 69-year-old Seattle resident was instructed by her doctor to rinse her sinuses twice daily to clear up a chronic sinus infection. So she filled a Neti pot with tap water filtered through a Brita Water Purifier and was on her way towards feeling better, or so she thought…

The unnamed woman’s real problems started when she noticed a raised, red sore on the bridge of her nose. Her doctor diagnosed it as rosacea and prescribed an ointment, but it didn’t work. So the woman spent the better part of a year seeing dermatologists in a hunt for answers. [1] [2]

Then, the woman began experiencing shaking on her left side, as well as numbness in her left arm and leg, all of which were found to be the result of a seizure. A CT scan showed a lesion on the woman’s brain, so doctors biopsied the area and sent it to Johns Hopkins University for analysis, thinking it could be a tumor. [1] [2]

Additional scans performed over the next several days showed the lesion was getting worse and new lesions were starting to appear. This led to a neurosurgeon at Swedish Medical Center, where the woman was being treated, opening the woman’s skull to take a closer look at the problem. He discovered that the woman’s brain was infected with an amoeba. [2]

Related Read: Teen Dies From Rare Brain-Eating Amoeba

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) rushed the anti-amoeba drug miltefosine to Seattle, but it was too little, too late. The woman lapsed into a coma and her family eventually chose to remove her from life support. [1] [2]

The nasal sore, initially believed to be rosacea, which preceded the patient’s brain lesion and never resolved.

Postmortem tests showed the woman died of Balamuthia mandrillaris, an amoeba that can reside in both soil and water. Balamuthia can travel to the brain and cause a deadly infection. Little is known about how the amoeba is contracted or how to prevent it. [1]

Researchers reported details of the case in the International Journal of Infectious Diseases. They warn that because Balamuthia is difficult to diagnose, “it is possible that many more cases of Balamuthia have been missed.”

About 200 cases of Balamuthia have been reported globally, with at least 70 of them reported in the U.S.

Had the woman survived, it would have been close to a medical miracle; Balamuthia has a fatality rate of 87-95%. [2]

Another type of brain-eating amoeba, Naegleria fowleri, killed 2 people in Louisiana after they used tap water to irrigate their sinuses with a Neti pot. Naegleria fowleri has an even more dismal fatality rate of about 98%. [3]

Only distilled, sterile, or cooled boiled water should be used for sinus irrigation, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). However, the Seattle woman’s doctors weren’t able to definitively link the Balamuthia infection to her Neti pot, as the water in her home wasn’t tested for the amoeba.

Read: Brain-Eating Amoebae Found in Louisiana Tap Water

Even so, they hope her case will lead more doctors to suspect an amoeba infection if a patient develops a sore or rash on their nose after rinsing their sinuses. [2]

So, be cautious, but don’t freak out. You’re more likely to drown than inhale an amoeba.

Sources:

[1] USA Today

[2] CNN

[3] Live Science


Source: http://naturalsociety.com/brain-eating-amoeba-kills-woman-after-using-neti-pot-1500/


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    • DK

      Sorry but that is just the excuse, the 69 year old went to a qualified PHD medical professional who failed to take a biopsy or blood sample. Invasive, but as the article lists flesh eating amoeba is a risk encountered throughout the US. I do believe the messed up obamacare was meant to sort out the costs, if neither private not private public is working time to spend on a US NHS since I will point out, at no stage did private work for this pensioner and from the looks of things she should have been in a ward whilst diagnosis was underway since her cure was time sensitive- at her age especially. The odds are especially good the Rosea was the intiial point of infection when the then 68 year old washed her face and it took a year to migrate through the bloodsteam into the brain, plenty of time. Rapid infection and death tends to occur when the sinus membrane is penetrated by the amoeba during a swimming session. We closed Baths roman baths in 1978 Naegleria fowleri was found in the water after the death of a child, it is the only place in the UK where it is found and must be brought in by tourists to be present.

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