Boy dies of infection from rare brain-eating amoebain Kerala, third such death in two months
The Hindu
A 12-year-old Kerala boy who had been undergoing treatment for primary amoebic meningoencephalitis in Kozhikode has died. The infection is caused by a rare ‘brain-eating’ amoeba
A 12-year-old boy from Feroke, who had been undergoing treatment for primary amoebic meningoencephalitis at a private hospital in Kozhikode city in Kerala, died on July 4 night.
This is the third death due to the a rare and fatal infection in the past two months in Kerala.
According to sources, E.P. Mridul, son of E.P. Ajith Prasad and Jyothi, was a Class VII student of Farook Higher Secondary School. He was first taken to the government taluk hospital at Feroke after he complained of headache and vomiting last month. Mridul had taken bath in a local pond near the Farook College earlier.
He was later referred to the Government Medical College Hospital, Kozhikode, and then to the private hospital. Mridul had been in a critical condition since June 24.
V. Dakshina, 13, of Kannur died of a similar infection at a private hospital in Kozhikode on June 12. Fadva, 5, of Munniyur in Malappuram, died at the Government Medical College Hospital, Kozhikode, on May 20.
The Kerala Health department is planning to issue special guidelines for the treatment of the infection against the backdrop of these deaths.
The infection is caused by Naegleria fowleri, also called ‘brain-eating amoeba’, which lives in fresh warm water, such as lakes and rivers. The amoeba infects people when it enters their body through the nose. It travels up to the brain from the nose, where it destroys the brain tissues and results in its swelling. The symptoms include headache, fever, nausea, vomiting, altered mental status, and seizures.