Orlando Sentinel

‘Brain-eating amoeba’ led to Fla. death

What you can do to avoid infection

- By Howard Cohen

The old “get out of the water” fear once was stoked by a fictional shark tale set off the coast of Martha’s Vineyard.

Florida could have an updated version that is even more fraught with danger. “Get out of your shower and bath.” Or, at least, don’t let tap water get sucked up your nose.

The idea revolves around a death in Southwest Florida in February from a “brain-eating amoeba” known as Naegleria fowleri.

The Florida Department of Health in Charlotte County confirmed that a person was infected with Naegleria fowleri, “possibly due to sinus rinse practices utilizing tap water.”

The local NBC affiliate reported that the person used a neti pot filled with tap water as a sinus rinse.

A neti pot is a container designed to rinse debris or mucus from the nasal cavity, according to Mayo Clinic. People use neti pots to treat symptoms of nasal allergies, sinus problems or colds. The Mayo Clinic cautions that “it’s important to use bottled water that has been distilled or sterilized. Tap water is acceptable if it’s been passed through a filter with a pore size of 1 micron or smaller or if it’s been boiled for several minutes and then left to cool until it’s lukewarm.”

Florida’s health department has not released details on the person who died or identified the use of a neti pot, but acknowledg­ed how administer­ing the rinse could have resulted in this death.

You cannot contract the infection by drinking tap water, according to the health department. When you swallow water, it goes down your windpipe and into your stomach and organisms are broken down through the body’s digestive process.

Water contaminat­ed with the amoeba has to enter the body through the nose to do damage.

“Because that is the pathway for Naegleria to work its way into the cerebral spinal fluid in the brain, what ends up happening

is the infection overwhelms the body, and ... unfortunat­ely, it’s highly dangerous and fatal,” Dr. Joe Pepe, an administra­tor at the Charlotte County Health Department, told NBC2.

The department warned of the potential dangers of Naegleria fowleri, a microscopi­c singlecell­ed living amoeba.

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, instances like this happen when water containing the amoeba enters the body through the nose.

“This typically happens when people go swimming, diving, or when they put their heads under fresh water, like in lakes and rivers,” according to the CDC. “The amoeba then travels up the nose to the brain, where it destroys the brain tissue and causes a devastatin­g infection called primary amoebic meningoenc­ephalitis.”

At that point, the infection is almost always fatal, the CDC says.

Naegleria fowleri is not found in salt water, like the ocean, the CDC says. Also, you can’t get a Naegleria fowleri infection from a properly cleaned, maintained, and disinfecte­d swimming pool. Chemicals like chlorine kill the amoeba.

In very rare instances, Naegleria fowleri has been found in swimming pools, splash pads, surf parks, or other recreation­al venues that are poorly maintained or don’t have enough chlorine in them. Portable backyard pools usually are filled with untreated water from a hose.

Naegleria fowleri generally fares better in warm, fresh water sources that are 80 degrees or more, which is why lakes and rivers in warm climes like Florida can be potential sources.

Infections from Naegleria fowleri are rare, according to the CDC. There have been 31 infections reported in the United States between 2012 and 2021 — between zero and five cases annually in that period. Of those cases, 28 people were infected by exposure to recreation­al water, two people were infected after rinsing their sinuses using contaminat­ed tap water, and one person was infected by contaminat­ed tap water used on a backyard slip-n-slide.

In 2022, three cases were reported in Iowa, Nebraska and Arizona.

Between 1962 and 2022, 37 cases have been reported in Florida, second only to Texas with 39 cases, according to the CDC.

A 13-year-old Palatka, Florida boy, vacationin­g at a North Central Florida campground, died after he was infected with the amoeba in August 2020, News4Jax reported. The property was not named because it was not positively identified as the source of the infection.

Florida’s health department reported a case in Hillsborou­gh County in July 2020.

 ?? SMITH COLLECTION/GADO/GETTY IMAGES ?? A photomicro­graph shows characteri­stics associated with a case of amebic meningoenc­ephalitis due to “brain-eating amoeba” known as Naegleria fowleri parasites. A man in Southwest Florida died in February after using a neti pot filed with infected tap water as a sinus rinse.
SMITH COLLECTION/GADO/GETTY IMAGES A photomicro­graph shows characteri­stics associated with a case of amebic meningoenc­ephalitis due to “brain-eating amoeba” known as Naegleria fowleri parasites. A man in Southwest Florida died in February after using a neti pot filed with infected tap water as a sinus rinse.

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