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Health officials in Florida are investigating the death of a man infected with Naegleria fowleri, or brain-eating amoeba.
Naegleria is a single-celled living organism so small it can be seen only with a microscope. Commonly found in lakes, rivers, hot springs and soil. Only one species of Naegleria, Naegleria fowleri, infects people, according to the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The man’s identity hasn’t been made public yet, but officials say they believe he was using tap water to rinse his sinuses. Although it’s rare to be infected with Naegleria, it can happen when contaminated water enters the body through the nose. Drinking tap water cannot cause the infection, the Charlotte County Department of Health stated in a news release.
With allergy season arriving early, you might be tempted to find relief with a sinus rinse. If so, health officials say, use only distilled or sterile water. You can use tap water if you boil it for at least a minute and let it cool before sinus rinsing. They also advise:
Residents in Charlotte County should follow the instructions below:
Do not allow water to go up your nose when bathing, showering, washing your face or swimming in a plastic or blow-up pool.
Do not jump into or put your head under the bath water.
Do not allow children to play unsupervised with hoses or sprinklers.
Keep plastic or blow-up pools clean and disinfected between each use.
originally posted by: eXia7
I'm pretty sure this affected him because of the location. The amoeba had a direct path to his brain with little to no protection from the immune system, whereas if it was ingested I'm sure the bacteria in the digestive system would've killed it.
originally posted by: putnam6
originally posted by: eXia7
I'm pretty sure this affected him because of the location. The amoeba had a direct path to his brain with little to no protection from the immune system, whereas if it was ingested I'm sure the bacteria in the digestive system would've killed it.
Obviously, once it gets in your stomach but you do realize, how close your sinuses drain into the same esophagus as your guzzle your water. Haven't you ever made somebody sneeze their milk out thier noses at lunch in school?
Here's what I gather if they have that warning there are likely amoebas in the water system, certainly they test for them.
originally posted by: Edumakated
Given how many millions of people use neti pots with just tap water, I think it is safe to say this was a freak accident....
The sinuses are sensitive though. I have a CPAP and tap water can aggravate them if I don't use distilled water.
originally posted by: eXia7
originally posted by: putnam6
originally posted by: eXia7
I'm pretty sure this affected him because of the location. The amoeba had a direct path to his brain with little to no protection from the immune system, whereas if it was ingested I'm sure the bacteria in the digestive system would've killed it.
Obviously, once it gets in your stomach but you do realize, how close your sinuses drain into the same esophagus as your guzzle your water. Haven't you ever made somebody sneeze their milk out thier noses at lunch in school?
Here's what I gather if they have that warning there are likely amoebas in the water system, certainly they test for them.
I actually live in FL, this kind of stuff happens a lot more often than discussed. I've seen numerous water notices for some ponds and even small lagoon/inlet beaches that sometimes post warnings about flesh eating bacteria. I mostly heed these warnings, but i've also been in some nasty swampy water as well and nothing happened.
I only bathe with municipal water, I try and not drink it if I can.. In my county the water smells and tastes very chlorinated.
I suppose its just the luck of the draw.
originally posted by: eXia7
originally posted by: putnam6
originally posted by: eXia7
I'm pretty sure this affected him because of the location. The amoeba had a direct path to his brain with little to no protection from the immune system, whereas if it was ingested I'm sure the bacteria in the digestive system would've killed it.
Obviously, once it gets in your stomach but you do realize, how close your sinuses drain into the same esophagus as your guzzle your water. Haven't you ever made somebody sneeze their milk out thier noses at lunch in school?
Here's what I gather if they have that warning there are likely amoebas in the water system, certainly they test for them.
I actually live in FL, this kind of stuff happens a lot more often than discussed. I've seen numerous water notices for some ponds and even small lagoon/inlet beaches that sometimes post warnings about flesh eating bacteria. I mostly heed these warnings, but i've also been in some nasty swampy water as well and nothing happened.
I only bathe with municipal water, I try and not drink it if I can.. In my county the water smells and tastes very chlorinated.
I suppose its just the luck of the draw.
originally posted by: putnam6
originally posted by: eXia7
originally posted by: putnam6
originally posted by: eXia7
I'm pretty sure this affected him because of the location. The amoeba had a direct path to his brain with little to no protection from the immune system, whereas if it was ingested I'm sure the bacteria in the digestive system would've killed it.
Obviously, once it gets in your stomach but you do realize, how close your sinuses drain into the same esophagus as your guzzle your water. Haven't you ever made somebody sneeze their milk out thier noses at lunch in school?
Here's what I gather if they have that warning there are likely amoebas in the water system, certainly they test for them.
I actually live in FL, this kind of stuff happens a lot more often than discussed. I've seen numerous water notices for some ponds and even small lagoon/inlet beaches that sometimes post warnings about flesh eating bacteria. I mostly heed these warnings, but i've also been in some nasty swampy water as well and nothing happened.
I only bathe with municipal water, I try and not drink it if I can.. In my county the water smells and tastes very chlorinated.
I suppose its just the luck of the draw.
Yep, this is true we had the freshwater flesh-eating bacteria here in Georgia, where that one girl got infected in a river in Columbus Georgia, and wound up having to get some of her appendages amputated. Hundreds if not thousands got in that water, what made it the perfect storm where she got infected?
Speculation here on agricultural runoff where pesticides make some bacteria super strong and antibiotic-resistant
originally posted by: putnam6
a reply to: Athetos
Here's the thing IIRC the South Carolina incident made it seem like it was because it came from a garden hose because it has stagnated in the hose, that's much different than the amoeba potentially circulating in your pipes, where you need to be concerned about washing your face. I'd imagine along with your nostrils your eyes and ears both could be entrances where it's close enough to potentially get to your brain.
www.google.com...
Though the brain has billions of neurons (cells that transmit sensory and other information), it has no pain receptors. The ache from a headache comes from other nerves — inside blood vessels in your head, for example — telling your brain something is wrong.
edit on 03/22/2022 by sarahvital because: (no reason given)edit on 03/22/2022 by sarahvital because: clarity
lol,
Though the brain has billions of neurons (cells that transmit sensory and other information), it has no pain receptors. The ache from a headache comes from other nerves — inside blood vessels in your head, for example — telling your brain something is wrong.
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