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Primary Amoebic Menigoencephalitis

Published on Mar 18, 2016

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

Primary Amoebic Menigoencephalitis

Matthew Davis/megan coffey/linnea shorey
Photo by EUSKALANATO

Naegleria Fowleri

  • Free-living Amoeba
  • Species: Acanthameba
  • Thrives in warm, tepid fresh water
  • Temperatures above 89° F
  • Equatorial Regions

What is PAM?

  • Causes necrosis and hemorrhaging  as it migrates
  • Inflammation of the Meninges
  • Rapid amoebic growth eventually results in death
  • Signs and symptoms are very similar to bacterial meningitis
  • Commonly known as the "Brain-Eating" infection

Pathology

  • Intranasal inoculation and spread
  • Release of enzymes and cytolytic proteins during Trophozoite phase
  • Microglia initiates inflammatory response due to interactions with N.Folweri
  • Breakdown of sphingomyelin, connective tissue, and structural proteins
  • N.Fowleri Trophozoite ingests broken down matter through  its "food-cup"

HEMORRHAGING

  • Olfactory bulb
  • Cerebellum
  • CNS
  • Temporal and Orbitofrontal lobes
  • Hypothalamus

Stage 1 Symptoms

  • Severe frontal headache
  • Fever
  • Nausea
  • Vomitting
  • Immediately follow inocculation

Stage 2 Symptoms

  • Stiff Neck
  • Seizures
  • Altered Mental State
  • Hallucinations
  • Coma

Fatality Rate

  • Greater than 95%
  • Only 3 out of 132 people infected have survived in the U.S.
  • Those who do survive are often declared braindead

Risks

  • Swimming in warm, freshwater
  • Nasal Irrigation
  • Some religious practices
Photo by cyborgsuzy