Naegleriasis, also known as primary amoebic meningoencephalitis ( PAM), is an almost invariably fatal infection of the brain by the free-living Protozoa Naegleria fowleri. Symptoms include headache, fever, nausea, vomiting, a stiff neck, confusion, and . Symptoms progress rapidly over around five days with characteristics of both meningitis and encephalitis, making it a type of meningoencephalitis. Death usually results within one to two weeks of symptom onset.
N. fowleri is typically found in warm bodies of fresh water, such as ponds, lakes, rivers and . It is found in an amoeboid, temporary flagellate stage or microbial cyst in soil, poorly maintained municipal water supplies, water heaters, near warm-water discharges of industrial plants and in poorly chlorinated or unchlorinated swimming pools. There is no evidence of it living in salt water. As the disease is rare, it is often not considered during diagnosis.
Although infection occurs very rarely, it almost inevitably results in death.One death in September 2018 was the first confirmed case of the infection in the United States since 2016. )l
It affects healthy children or young adults who have recently been exposed to bodies of fresh water. Scientists speculate that lower age groups are at a higher risk of contracting the disease because adolescents have a more underdeveloped and porous cribriform plate, through which the amoeba travels to reach the brain.
The amoeba follows the olfactory nerve fibers through the cribriform plate of the ethmoid bone into the skull. There, it migrates to the and subsequently other regions of the brain, where it feeds on the nerve tissue. The organism then begins to consume cells of the brain, piecemeal through trogocytosis, by means of an amoebostome, a unique actin-rich sucking apparatus extended from its cell surface. It then becomes pathogenic, causing primary amoebic meningoencephalitis (PAM or PAME).
Primary amoebic meningoencephalitis presents symptoms similar to those of relatively common bacterial and viral meningitis. Upon abrupt disease onset, a plethora of symptoms arise. Endogenous cytokines, released in response to the pathogens, affect the thermoregulatory neurons of the hypothalamus causing a rise in body temperature. Additionally, the cytokines may act on the vascular organ of the lamina terminalis, leading to upregulation of Prostaglandin E2 contributing to hyperthermia. Further, the release of cytokines, exotoxins released by the pathogens and an increase in intracranial pressure stimulate the nociceptors in the meninges resulting in pain sensations.
The release of cytotoxic molecules in the central nervous system leads to extensive tissue damage and necrosis, such as damage to the olfactory nerve through lysis of nerve cells and demyelination.. Specifically, the olfactory nerve and bulbs become necrotic and hemorrhagic. Spinal flexion leads to Neck stiffness, or stiff neck, due to the stretching of the inflamed meninges. The increase in intracranial pressure stimulates the area postrema to create nausea sensations which may lead to brain herniation and damage to the reticular formation. Ultimately, the increase in cerebrospinal fluid from inflammation of the meninges increases intracranial pressure to an extent which leads to the destruction of the central nervous system. Although the exact pathophysiology behind the seizures caused by PAM is unknown, it is speculated that the seizures arise from altered meningeal permeability caused by increased intracranial pressure.
Detection in water is performed by centrifuge a water sample with E. coli added, then applying the pellet to a non-nutrient agar plate. After several days, the plate is microscopically inspected and Naegleria cysts are identified by their morphology. Final confirmation of the species' identity can be performed by various molecular or biochemical methods.
Confirmation of Naegleria presence can be done by a so-called flagellation test, where the organism is exposed to a hypotonic environment (distilled water). Naegleria, in contrast to other amoebae, differentiates within two hours into the flagellate state. Pathogenicity can be further confirmed by exposure to high temperature (42 °C): Naegleria fowleri is able to grow at this temperature, but the nonpathogenic Naegleria gruberi is not.
Advice stated in the press release from Taiwan's Centers for Disease Control recommended people prevent fresh water from entering the nostrils and avoid putting their heads down into fresh water or stirring mud in the water with feet. When starting to suffer from fever, headache, nausea, or vomiting subsequent to any kind of exposure to fresh water, even in the belief that no fresh water has traveled through the nostrils, people with such conditions should be carried to hospital quickly and make sure doctors are well-informed about the history of exposure to fresh water.
Treatment has often also used combination therapy with multiple other antimicrobials in addition to amphotericin, such as fluconazole, miconazole, rifampicin and azithromycin. They have shown limited success only when administered early in the course of an infection.
While the use of rifampicin has been common, including in all four North American cases of survival, its continued use has been questioned. It only has variable activity in vitro and it has strong effects on the therapeutic levels of other antimicrobials used by inducing cytochrome p450 pathways. Fluconazole is commonly used as it has been shown to have synergistic effects against naegleria when used with amphotericin in vitro.
In 2013–2016, three successfully treated cases in the United States utilized the medication miltefosine. In one of the cases, a 12-year-old female, was given miltefosine and targeted temperature management to manage cerebral edema which is secondary to the infection. She survived with no neurological damage. The targeted temperature management coupled with early diagnosis and the medication has been attributed with her survival. On the other hand, another survivor, an 8-year-old male, was diagnosed several days after symptoms appeared and was not treated with targeted temperature management although he was administered miltefosine. He suffered apparent permanent neurological damage. In 2016, a 16-year-old male also survived PAM. He was treated with the same protocols as of the 12-year-old female in 2013. He recovered with a near-complete neurological recovery; however, the patient has mentioned difficulties with learning post-recovery.
In 2018, a 10-year-old girl in the Spanish city of Toledo became the first person to contract the disease in Spain, and was successfully treated using intravenous and intrathecal amphotericin B.
A 2023 study on mice has shown that treatment that included a derivative of the drug acoziborole known as AN3057 significantly prolonged survival and showed a 28% recovery rate without relapse.
There is also a fourth survivor in the United States. However, he had a different strain.
In the US, the most common states with cases reported of PAM from N. fowleri are the southern states, with Texas and Florida having the highest prevalence. The most commonly affected age group is 5–14-year olds (those who play in water)."Number of Case-Reports of Primary Amebic Meningoencephalitis Caused by Naegleria Fowleri (N=133) by State of Exposure*— United States, 1962–2014". CDC.gov, CDC, www.cdc.gov/parasites/naegleria/pdf/naegleria-state-map-2014.pdf. The number of cases of infection could increase due to climate change, which was posited as the reason for three cases in Minnesota in 2010, 2012, and 2015.
In 1966, Butt termed the infection resulting from N. fowleri primary amoebic meningoencephalitis (PAM) to distinguish this central nervous system (CNS) invasion from other secondary invasions made by other amoebae such as Entamoeba histolytica. A retrospective study determined the first documented case of PAM possibly occurred in Britain in 1909. In 1966, four cases were reported in the US. By 1968 the causative organism, previously thought to be a species of Hartmannella, was identified as a novel species of Naegleria. This same year, occurrence of sixteen cases over a period of three years (1962–1965) was reported in Ústí nad Labem, Czechoslovakia. In 1970, Carter named the species of amoeba N. fowleri, after Malcolm Fowler.
Naegleriasis was the topic in Season 2 of the medical mystery drama House, M.D. in the two-part episode titled "Euphoria". It is also the topic of the episode "39 Differences" of season 6 of The Good Doctor.
the U.S. CDC offered miltefosine to doctors for the treatment of diseases caused by free-living amoebas including ''Naegleria'', despite a lack of any data on how well the drug reaches the central nervous system.
Prognosis
Epidemiology
the numbers of reported cases were expected to increase simply because of better-informed diagnoses being made both in ongoing cases and in autopsy findings.
History
Society and culture
Research
See also
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