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Daily Record
Daily Record
World
Rachel Hagan & Jordan Shepherd

Child dies from brain eating amoeba after swimming in infested water

A child has died after contracting a rare brain-eating amoeba from swimming in a river. US health officials say that an as-of-yet unnamed youth went for a swim in Elkhorn River in eastern Nebraska on August 8 and had to be rushed to hospital five days later after developing symptoms.

They were admitted to the hospital 48 hours after the onset of symptoms but sadly died ten days later, according to Douglas County Health Department. Authorities believe that the youngster was infected with primary amebic meningoencephalitis which thrives in freshwater bodies of water.

The Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) later confirmed that it had found Naegleria fowleri in the child’s cerebrospinal fluid (a watery fluid that flows in and around your brain and spinal cord). According to the Mirror, it was the first death from the deadly disease in the state’s history and the second in the Midwest this summer.

“We can only imagine the devastation this family must be feeling, and our deepest condolences are with them. We can honour the memory of this child by becoming educated about the risk and then taking steps to prevent infection", Douglas County Health Director Lindsay Huse said in a statement Wednesday. The CDC says the amoeba can enter the body through the nose when in the water, where it then travels up the nose to the brain.

The brain-eating single-cell organisms often thrive in warm freshwater lakes, rivers, canals and ponds. Last month, a person in Missouri from the same infection after swimming at the beach at Lake of Three Fires State Park in Iowa.

Caleb Ziegelbaue, 13, was hospitalised in Florida in July after contracting a deadly brain-eating amoeba and has been taken off his ventilator but is still fighting for his life. His aunt Katie Chiet posted on a GoFundMe page raising money for his treatment.

"His MRI scan continues to show damage in his brain but we remain hopeful that he'll turn the corner soon and make his way back to us!" The page said. Infections are extremely rare with around 31 infections reported in the US in the last 10 years. However, the fatality rate is around 97 per cent.

“Millions of recreational water exposures occur each year, while only 0 to 8 Naegleria fowleri infections are identified each year,” Nebraska state epidemiologist Matthew Donahue said in a statement. The Elkhorn River was not closed but Dr Huse urged people wear nose plugs if they swim in the river.

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