- Primary amoebic meningoencephalitis
Infobox_Disease
Name = PAGENAME
Caption =
DiseasesDB =
ICD10 = ICD10|B|60|2|b|50
ICD9 = ICD9|136.2
ICDO =
OMIM =
MedlinePlus =
eMedicineSubj = ped
eMedicineTopic = 81
MeshID =Primary amoebic meningoencephalitis (PAM, or PAME) is a disease of the
central nervous system caused by infection from anamoeba such as "Naegleria fowleri " or "Balamuthia mandrillaris ".Presentation
"Naegleria fowleri" propagates in warm, stagnant bodies of
freshwater (typically during the summer months), and enters the central nervous system afterinsufflation of infected water by attaching itself to theolfactory nerve . It then migrates through thecribiform plate and into theolfactory bulbs of theforebrain , where it multiplies itself greatly by feeding on nerve tissue. During this stage, occurring approximately 3-7 days post-infection, the typical symptoms areparosmia , rapidly progressing toanosmia (with resultantageusia ) as the nerve cells of the olfactory bulbs are consumed and replaced withnecrotic lesions.After the organisms have multiplied and largely consumed the olfactory bulbs, the infection rapidly spreads through the
mitral cell axons to the rest of thecerebrum , resulting in onset of frank encephalitic symptoms, includingcephalgia (headache),nausea , andrigidity of the neck muscles, progressing tovomiting ,delirium ,seizures , and eventually irreversiblecoma . Death usually occurs within 14 days of exposure as a result ofrespiratory failure .The disease is both exceptionally rare and exceptionally lethal: there have been fewer than 200 confirmed cases in recorded medical history, with an in-hospital
case fatality rate of ~97% (3% patientsurvival rate ).This extreme
morbidity is largely blamed on the unusually non-suggestivesymptom ology of the early-stage disease compounded by the necessity ofmicrobial culture of thecerebrospinal fluid to effect a positivediagnosis . The amoeba also demonstrates a particularly rapid late-stage propagation through the nerves of theolfactory system to many parts of the brain simultaneously (including the vulnerablemedulla ).Cause
"Naegleria fowleri" is an amoeba that is ubiquitous in soils and warm waters. Infection typically occurs during the summer months and patients typically have a history of exposure to a natural body of water. The organism specifically prefers temperatures above 32°C. The organism is extremely sensitive to chlorine (<0.5ppm). Exposure to the organism is extremely common due to its wide distribution in nature, but thus far lacks the ability to infect the body through any method other than direct contact with the olfactory nerve; the contaminated water must actually be fully
insufflated into thesinus cavities for transmission to occur.Michael Beach, a recreational waterborne illness specialist for the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention , stated in remarks to the Associated Press that the wearing of nose-clips to prevent insufflation of contaminated water would be an effective protection against contracting PAM, noting that "You'd have to have water going way up in your nose to begin with". ["6 die from brain-eating amoeba in lakes", Chris Kahn/Associated Press, 9/28/07"]Treatment
The current standard treatment is prompt
intravenous administration of heroic doses ofAmphotericin B , a systemicantifungal which is one of the few effective treatments for systemic infections ofProtozoan parasitic diseases (such asleishmaniasis andtoxoplasmosis ). The success rate in treating PAM is usually quite poor, since by the time of definitive diagnosis most patients have already manifested signs of terminal cerebralnecrosis . Even if definitive diagnosis is effected early enough to allow for a course of medication, Amphotericin B also causes significant and permanentnephrotoxicity in the heroic doses necessary to quickly halt the progress of the amoebae through the brain.ee also
*
Amoebic meningitis
*Free-living amebic infection
*Meningoencephalitis
*Waterborne diseases References
External links
* http://www.dshs.state.tx.us/idcu/disease/primary_amebic_meningoencephalitis/
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.