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Two children and a young man have died this summer from a brain-eating amoeba that lives in water, health officials say.
This  month, the rare infection killed a 16-year-old Florida girl, who fell  ill after swimming, and a 9-year-old Virginia boy, who died a week after  he went to a fishing day camp. The boy had been dunked the first day of  camp, his mother told the Richmond Times-Dispatch.
Those  cases are consistent with past cases, which are usually kids — often  boys — who get exposed to the bug while swimming or doing water sports  in warm ponds or lakes.
The third case, in Louisiana, was more  unusual. It was a young man whose death in June was traced to the tap  water he used in a device called a neti pot. It's a small teapot-shaped  container used to rinse out the nose and sinuses with salt water to  relieve allergies, colds and sinus trouble.
Health  officials later found the amoeba in the home's water system. The  problem was confined to the house; it wasn't found in city water  samples, said Dr. Raoult Ratard, Louisiana's state epidemiologist.
The  young man, who was only identified as in his 20s and from southeast  Louisiana, had not been swimming nor been in contact with surface water,  Ratard added.
He said only sterile, distilled, or boiled water should be used in neti pots.
The illness is extremely rare.  About 120 U.S. cases — almost all of them deaths — have been reported  since the amoeba was identified in the early 1960s, according to the  Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
About three deaths are reported each year, on average. Last year, there were four.
There  are no signs that cases are increasing, said Jonathan Yoder, who  coordinates surveillance of waterborne diseases for the CDC.
The  amoeba — Naegleria fowleri (pronounced nuh-GLEER-ee-uh FOWL-er-eye) — gets up the  nose, burrows up into the skull and destroys brain tissue. It's found in  warm lakes and rivers during the hot summer months, mostly in the  South.
It's a medical mystery  why some people who swim in amoeba-containing water get the fatal  nervous system condition while many others don't, experts say.
But the cases that do occur tend to be tragic, and there's only been one report of successful treatment.
"It's very difficult to treat. Most people die from it," Ratard said. 
Source: yahoonews
 
 
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