Menu

Post image 1
Post image 2
Post image 3
Post image 4
Post image 5
Post image 6
Post image 7
Post image 8
1 / 8
0

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

Reading 0:00
15s threshold

New drugs may help patients with life-threatening "brain-eating" amoeba infections. (Image credit: Marilyn Perkins for Live Science) 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." But Conrad had recently read that a new drug option, miltefosine, had been approved as an experimental treatment for N. fowleri infections.…

Continue reading — create a free account

Join HashtagPLUS to read full articles, follow hashtags, vote, and join the conversation.

Read More