jwz - How often do you get to welcome your new Brain-Eating Amoeba Overlords? Srsly. [entries|archive|friends|userinfo]
jwz

  www.jwz.org
  userinfo
  archive
  rss

Links
[»| [DNA Lounge] [Blog] [iCal] ]
[»| [DNA Lounge Legal Defense Fund] ]
[»| [WebCollage] [LJ WebCollage] ]

How often do you get to welcome your new Brain-Eating Amoeba Overlords? Srsly. [Fri, 28-Sep-2007 12:37 PM]
Previous Entry Add to Memories Tell a Friend Next Entry
[Tags|, ]
[music |Splendora -- Reanimator]


Best. Infographic. Evar.

Brain-Eating Amoeba Kills Arizona Boy
PHOENIX -- A 14-year-old Lake Havasu boy has become the sixth victim to die nationwide this year of a microscopic organism that attacks the body through the nasal cavity, quickly eating its way to the brain.

"This is a heat-loving amoeba. As water temperatures go up, it does better," Beach said. "In future decades, as temperatures rise, we'd expect to see more cases."

The amoeba typically live in lake bottoms, grazing off algae and bacteria in the sediment. Beach said people become infected when they wade through shallow water and stir up the bottom. If someone allows water to shoot up the nose -- say, by doing a cannonball off a cliff -- the amoeba can latch onto the person's olfactory nerve.

The amoeba destroys tissue as it makes its way up to the brain.

People who are infected tend to complain of a stiff neck, headaches and fevers, Beach said. In the later stages, they'll show signs of brain damage such as hallucinations and behavioral changes.

Once infected, most people have little chance of survival. Some drugs have been effective stopping the amoeba in lab experiments, but people who have been attacked rarely survive, Beach said. "Usually, from initial exposure it's fatal within two weeks," Beach said.

In addition to the Arizona case, health officials reported two cases in Texas and three more in central Florida this year. In response, central Florida authorities started an amoeba telephone hot line advising people to avoid warm, standing water, or any areas with obvious algae blooms.


linkReply

Comments:
[User Picture]From: [info]yosh
Fri, 28-Sep-2007 8:02 PM (UTC)

(Link)

If you or someone you know has recently snorted lakewater, please press one....
[User Picture]From: [info]jayp39
Fri, 28-Sep-2007 8:10 PM (UTC)

(Link)

All the kids are doing it.
[User Picture]From: [info]ungratefulninja
Fri, 28-Sep-2007 8:14 PM (UTC)

(Link)

In light of this discovery, Texas and Florida make SO MUCH MORE SENSE.
[User Picture]From: [info]giles
Fri, 28-Sep-2007 8:14 PM (UTC)

(Link)

This is weak. Why can't it be something awesome like a shiny black beetle burrowing it's way into people's brains? Oh, look at me, I'm a big scary amoeba. Wooo, I'm reproducing asexually inside your skull. Whatever, that's no kinda Star Trek movie.
[User Picture]From: [info]merovingian
Fri, 28-Sep-2007 8:17 PM (UTC)

(Link)

Would it be better if it reproduced sexually?
[User Picture]From: [info]giles
Fri, 28-Sep-2007 8:24 PM (UTC)

(Link)

Yes, absolutely. And none of that nonsense with spores or whatever. Hot amoeba sex, all up in your frontal lobe. The thing eating your brain should be more horrible than your brain. Look at that infographic up there - if it was cougars eating bunnies, you think they'd show the bunny? No! They'd show a big slavering cougar, possibly with an erection. But when it's amoebae eating brains, we get a brain. They didn't even shop Pac-Man on there.
[User Picture]From: [info]jwz
Fri, 28-Sep-2007 8:28 PM (UTC)

(Link)

That would technically be "squicking", I guess.
[User Picture]From: [info]merovingian
Fri, 28-Sep-2007 9:58 PM (UTC)

(Link)

Would it be considered "microsquicking" perhaps?
[User Picture]From: [info]merovingian
Fri, 28-Sep-2007 8:16 PM (UTC)

(Link)

Gosh, I had a stiff neck and kind of a headache yesterday. I'd better start having hallucinations and erratic behavior soon!
[User Picture]From: [info]pygmalion
Fri, 28-Sep-2007 8:17 PM (UTC)

(Link)


advising people to avoid warm, standing water, or any areas with obvious algae blooms

So, basically, no more swimming in central and southern Arizona. Ever.
From: [info]temp_revenge
Fri, 28-Sep-2007 8:26 PM (UTC)

(Link)

Growing up in Florida, this was always a concern. Look, just don't swim in fresh water or ponds. It's easy.
[User Picture]From: [info]msjen
Fri, 28-Sep-2007 8:31 PM (UTC)

(Link)

This is seriously why I have not been swimming in a lake since I was a small child. Someone told me about this and I wouldn't go near a lake after that. Note three cases in central Florida -- I was right, dammit.

And, shouldn't there be an advisory *before* you call the hotline?
[User Picture]From: [info]sparklydevil
Fri, 28-Sep-2007 9:22 PM (UTC)

(Link)

you mean people actually swim in lakes? ew, sick!
[User Picture]From: [info]jered
Fri, 28-Sep-2007 9:45 PM (UTC)

(Link)

I totally remember that season 2 episode of House. I would have figured it out right away... who says you never learn anything from TV?
[User Picture]From: [info]drhoz
Sat, 29-Sep-2007 12:04 AM (UTC)

(Link)

except they got the symptoms totally wrong. You're dead long before the amoeba can get to your optic lobe.
[User Picture]From: [info]andr00
Fri, 28-Sep-2007 9:57 PM (UTC)

(Link)

Attack of the microzombies!
[User Picture]From: [info]substitute
Fri, 28-Sep-2007 10:14 PM (UTC)

This amoeba's got a mind of its own

(Link)

Amoeba! Amoeba! Amoeba!

http://www.masculinehygiene.com/d/m/amoeba.mp3

We are scientists in our lab, etc.
[User Picture]From: [info]wildilocks
Sat, 29-Sep-2007 1:16 AM (UTC)

(Link)

This is old news to me - here in Western Australia when we were kids there were several high profile cases of amoebic meningitis and we were all terrified of swimming in water that wasn't the beach or a chlorinated swimming pool because of all the media hoohah!
[User Picture]From: [info]klooloola
Sat, 29-Sep-2007 12:57 PM (UTC)

why is it not easy to treat?

(Link)

Maybe the docs were not expecting amoeba till it was too late.

Most tropical doctors will always look out for amoeba or worms, tuberculosis and malaria.

Metronidazole is the standard treatment for this
see http://www.ajtmh.org/cgi/content/abstract/51/2/180
It is also a very cheap drug.

I always pack a supply of metronidazole and ciprofloaxacin while travelling the tropics.