Kansas Resident Dies From Brain-Eating Amoeba After Swimming in Warm Lake
It is the fourth death this summer linked to the parasite, which is found in stagnant warm water.
The person likely picked up the infection while swimming in Winfield City Lake in Cowley County, ABC affiliate KAKE-TV in Wichita reported..
The Sedgwick County resident entered the hospital on Aug. 19 with
headaches and developed breathing problems, and died five days later,
according to the Kansas City Star reported.
The brain-eating amoeba, also known as the parasite Naegleria, enters
through the nose, travels through the sinuses and infects the brain and
cerebrospinal fluid.
Though this parasite is very rare, it tends to grow in stagnant, fresh
water during high summer temperatures, Barry Inman, an epidemiologist at
the Brevard County, Fla., Health Department, told ABCnews.com.
The Kansas victim is the first person to have died from a brain-eating
amoeba infection in Kansas, but since the early 1960s, about 120 cases
of brain-eating amoeba infections have been reported, nearly all of
which were fatal, according to the Centers for Disease Control.
Two children in Virginia and Florida died this August from the deadly parasite. Another death was reported in Louisiana.
Bonnie Strickland, the aunt of 9-year-old Christian Alexander Strickland, told the Richmond Times-Dispatch
that her nephew died Aug. 5 from amoebic meningoencephalitis, a deadly
parasitic infection that attacks the brain and spine, after attending a
Virginia fishing camp.
"The doctor described it to us as such a slight chance that they didn't
even think it would be possible," Strickland told the newspaper.
"Sadly, we have had a Naegleria infection in Virginia this summer," Dr.
Keri Hall, state epidemiologist at the Virginia Department of Health,
said in a statement. "It's important that people be aware of...safe
swimming messages."
A week after Christian's fishing camp, he began experiencing the
telltale symptoms of the parasitic infection-turned-meningitis:
headache, stiffness, fever and nausea.
T
he Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also confirmed that a 16-year-old Floridan Courtney Nash
died from the parasitic illness, after swimming with her cousins in St.
John's river. Within a week, she began experiencing the same symptoms
as Christian did, Inman said.
"She was out swimming ... in the St. John's River, having fun like any
other kids would in the water," Nash's uncle, Tom Uzel, said. Nash and
her family had swum in that river all their lives.
One in 10 Million Chance of Contracting Illness
Though chances of contracting this parasite are about one in 10 million,
said Inman, people should be aware that there is some risk in swimming
in certain freshwater ponds, lakes and rivers.
"We have signs up in public freshwaters," Inman said. "All we can do is
inform people that the organism is there. It's going to proliferate and
grow, especially in the hot months. There are nose clips people can wear
to reduce risk, but someone who doesn't want any risk needs to stay out
of freshwater ponds and streams, especially those that are stagnant."
Inman said that anyone suffering from the symptoms of this parasitic
infection -- fever, nausea, stiff neck and a frontal headache -- should
seek medical attention.
Source: By OLIVIA KATRANDJIAN
ABC News
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