The Guardian Australia

Las Vegas teen dies from brain-eating amoeba as experts warn against panic

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Experts have said that the death of a teenager in the Las Vegas area from a rare brain-eating amoeba should prompt caution, not panic, among people at freshwater lakes, rivers and springs.

“It gets people’s attention because of the name,” Brian Labus, a former public health epidemiolo­gist, said on Friday of the naturally occurring organism officially called Naegleria fowleri but almost always dubbed the braineatin­g amoeba. “But it is a very, very rare disease.”

Investigat­ors believe the teen was exposed in warm waters at Lake Mead. The southern Nevada health district did not identify the teen who died but said he might have been exposed to the microscopi­c organism during the weekend of 30 September in the Kingman Wash area, on the Arizona side of the Colorado River reservoir, behind Hoover Dam. The district publicized the case on Wednesday, following confirmati­on of the cause from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The CDC has tallied just 154 cases of infection and death from the amoeba in the US since 1962, said Labus, who teaches at the School of Public Health at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Almost half those cases were in Texas and Florida. Only one was reported in Nevada before this week.

“I wouldn’t say there’s an alarm to sound for this,” Labus said. “People need to be smart about it when they’re in places where this rare amoeba actually lives.” The organism is found in waters ranging from 77F (25C) to 115F (46C), he said.

The district and the Lake Mead national recreation area, which oversees the lake and the Colorado River, noted the amoeba only infects people by entering the nose and migrating to the brain. It is almost always fatal.

“It cannot infect people if swallowed, and is not spread from person to person,” news releases from the two agencies said. Both advised people to avoid jumping or diving into bodies of warm water, especially during summer, and to keep the head above water in hot springs or other “untreated geothermal waters” that pool in pocket canyons in the vast recreation area.

“It is 97% fatal but 99% preventabl­e,” said Dennis Kyle, professor of infectious diseases and cellular biology and director of the Center for Tropical and Emerging Global Diseases at the University of Georgia. “You can protect yourself by not jumping into water that gets up your nose, or use nose plugs.”

The amoeba causes primary amebic meningoenc­ephalitis, a brain infection with symptoms resembling meningitis or encephalit­is that initially include headache, fever, nausea or vomiting – then progress to stiff neck, seizures and coma that can lead to death.

Symptoms can start one to 12 days after exposure, and death usually occurs within about five days. There is no known effective treatment, and Kyle said a diagnosis almost always comes too late.

A survey of news reports found cases in northern California, Nebraska and Iowa. A CDC map showed most cases during the last 60 years in southern US states, led by 39 cases in Texas and 37 in Florida.

“I think this year is sort of an average year for cases,” Kyle said. “But this was a very warm summer. The key point is that warmer weather tends to generate more amoeba in the environmen­t.”

 ?? Photograph: Julie Jacobson/AP ?? Twilight at the edge of Kingman Wash at Lake Mead national recreation area in Arizona, where health officials say the teen may have been exposed.
Photograph: Julie Jacobson/AP Twilight at the edge of Kingman Wash at Lake Mead national recreation area in Arizona, where health officials say the teen may have been exposed.

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