Salad

‘Brain-eating’ amoebas are nearly always fatal. New treatments may change that.

On a hot Saturday in San Antonio over 10 years ago, an 8-year-old boy was rushed to the hospital after days of fever, headache, vomiting and sensitivity to light. The child’s mother, who lived near the Texas-Mexico border, had taken him to a series of clinics in Mexico, but his condition had worsened. The child was now unconscious and unresponsive to sound, light or other stimuli.

Doctors put the child on a ventilator and began a breakneck effort to find out what was wrong. What they discovered, swimming in the boy’s cerebrospinal fluid, was an organism that left little room for hope: Naegleria fowleri, more popularly known as a “brain-eating amoeba.”

Related posts

‘No one knows what they are’: Researchers discover new type of cell that’s seen only during pregnancy

sys.admin

The Artemis II astronauts have just flown farther from Earth than any humans in history

sys.admin

Just in time for the total lunar eclipse, this beginner-friendly telescope is now $100 off at Amazon

sys.admin

Leave a Comment