Naegleria fowleri meningitis, first confirmed case at higher latitude than previously recorded: Minnesota 2010

 

In 2007, I noted in the news a small but significant increase in this rare disease. Around the same time, I and others were commenting on how the weather patterns in recent years has been strangely variable and the summers unusually hot, even for Florida. Climate change has been a serious concern for me. In the past decade, I have changed most aspects of my lifestyle dramatically, doing my small part and advocating for sustainability, in the hope of reversing human-driven effects on climate. The “blip” in incidence was therefore an alarm to me, and I became concerned that cases of Naegleria would begin to trend upward. Since then, I lost my son to this parasite, and I have followed the news of others’ deaths, including in geographically unlikely areas, while experts have continued to call it “rare”.

It IS rare. Just not to me. I and other parents of victims can no longer believe that it is as rare as presupposed. We need only the empirical evidence of our devastation.  Of emerging weather havoc that we have never seen in our lifetimes. These patterns are now all too clear to us, and we wish they were glaringly obvious to others.

For us, there is some comfort that this parasite and the role of climate change are garnering the attention of experts, and that awareness is spreading to clinicians. Scientific understanding advances only with care and meticulous research. We are ever so grateful for the efforts of public health in the investigation of Naegleria fowleri and the advancement of knowledge that may benefit others.

I should note that this is not likely to be the first Minnesota case, only the first definitive diagnosis. There is reason to suggest another case occurred in 2008, but confirmation was not possible then (unpublished, personal communication from a parent of a girl who died under suggestive circumstances).

Fatal Naegleria fowleri Infection Acquired in Minnesota: Possible Expanded Range of a Deadly Thermophilic Organism

Sarah K. Kemble,1,3 Ruth Lynfield,1 Aaron S. DeVries,1 Dennis M. Drehner,2 William F. Pomputius III,2 Michael J. Beach,4 Govinda S. Visvesvara,4 Alexandre J. da Silva,5 Vincent R. Hill,4 Jonathan S. Yoder,4 Lihua Xiao,4 Kirk E. Smith,1 andRichard Danila1

1Minnesota Department of Health, Saint Paul; 2Children’s Hospitals and Clinics of Minnesota, Minneapolis; 3Epidemic Intelligence Service, 4National

Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, and 5Center for Global Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia

Background. 

Primary amebic meningoencephalitis (PAM), caused by the free-living ameba Naegleria fowleri, has historically been associated with warm freshwater exposures at lower latitudes of the United States. In August 2010, a Minnesota resident, aged 7 years, died of rapidly progressive meningoencephalitis after local freshwater exposures, with no history of travel outside the state. PAM was suspected on the basis of amebae observed in cerebrospinal fluid.

Methods. Water and sediment samples were collected at locations where the patient swam during the 2 weeks preceding illness onset. Patient and environmental samples were tested for N. fowleri with use of culture and realtime polymerase chain reaction (PCR); isolates were genotyped. Historic local ambient temperature data were obtained.

Results. N. fowleri isolated from a specimen of the patient’s brain and from water and sediment samples was confirmed using PCR as N. fowleri genotype 3. Surface water temperatures at the times of collection of the positive environmental samples ranged from 22.1_C to 24.5_C. August 2010 average air temperature near the exposure site was 25_C, 3.6_C above normal and the third warmest for August in the Minneapolis area since 1891.

Conclusions. This first reported case of PAM acquired in Minnesota occurred 550 miles north of the previously reported northernmost case in the Americas. Clinicians should be aware that N. fowleri–associated PAM can occur in areas at much higher latitude than previously described. Local weather patterns and long-term climate change could impact the frequency of PAM.

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The Amoeba Next Door: It really was the Neti Pot. Now What?

Another adult, a 51 year old woman from Desoto Parish in Louisiana, has been confirmed to have died from Naegleria fowleri meningoencephalitis associated with use of a neti pot and tap water. Early this month, Louisiana Department of Health issued a warning to residents not to use water that has not been boiled or otherwise purified prior to using it in a neti pot or sinus wash bottle. Dr. Raoult Ratard, State Epidemiologist, went further, recommending that neti pots and bottles be cleaned, scrubbed, and allowed to dry before use.

This situation highlights, yet again, that:

1. Awareness is VITAL to diagnosis, research, and treatment.

Naegleria fowleri infection is reported to be rare, but it may only be so because we so often fail to see it. This latest case could easily have been signed off on a death certificate as just another unfortunate death from a generic bacterial “meningitis” without further ado. As is typical for most deaths in America today, an autopsy would not have been performed, & the final assumed diagnosis of the patient’s attending physician would have been taken at its word on the death certificate, case closed, by the local medical examiner. It takes unusual conditions, such as unexpected death within 24 hours of hospitalization, to get the case to the medical examiner’s autopsy suite. We might not have known, for years in fact, about either of these two cases of neti-pot-associated-Naegleria if not for serendipity and doctors who were willing to see the unbelievable.

This patient’s astute clinician recollected Dr. Ratard’s earlier warning. Maybe it was as brief as a report overheard in the car on the drive to work this past summer. But awareness led the doctor to ask about neti pot use or swimming in fresh warm waters, and the diagnostic hunt turned up the truth. The truth, in turn, confirmed Dr. Ratard’s conjecture last summer: That a neti pot, as unlikely as it seemed, could have caused a young man to die before his time. That Naegleria fowleri, as preposterous as it seemed to some of my colleagues, could indeed be living in our homes, quite literally, right under our noses.

Awareness. It’s a brutal and beautiful thing. Once you know, you can save lives.

2. Great, we’re aware. NOW WHAT?

For those infected, who suffer unspeakably, and die horribly, and for those who watch it happen to them in our very arms, awareness is not enough. We NEED rapid diagnostic tools for Naegleria fowleri meningoencephalitis. We NEED effective, rapidly available treatments for Naegleria fowleri meningoencephalitis. We need them NOW.

It’s not terribly difficult or costly science. It’s just not as lucrative as anti-depressants, erectile dysfunction pills, or the next me-too anti-cholesterol drug.

Now, please, please, in the name of those who have died and who are going to die, won’t SOMEBODY fund the research??

Become aware & spread the word on preventing amoebic meningoencephalitis. Patients, ask your doctor next time. Students, ask your attending, what she or he knows about it. Why isn’t there a diagnostic test? Why isn’t there a cure?

A pebble dropped into the ocean ripples farther than you see.

Naegleria FAQ at CDC

A thorough technical review of Naegleria, where it lives, etc (as well as other waterborne pathogens)

An excellent resource on water quality and safety topics

 

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The People want us to lead…So USF Health Answers: Creating Stewards & SELECTing Leaders

Once again, the people are thirsting for our action. For doctors and healthcare academia to come forward as the personal health advocates they believe us to be. Yet the biggest factor in why we, as a collective profession, have not?

 

Well, too often, we’re lousy team players. We are highly trained to compete with one another for ranking, for the best residency, the best fellowship. We are highly trained in medical school to understand the details of medicine, but we aren’t trained to be policymakers, to understand business models. In private practice, we quickly learn to compete for prestige, for patients, for contracts, for money. We often don’t relate well with nurses and other members of the healthcare team. When it comes to teamwork and coordination, we are very often just sorely lacking. It’s sad, really.

 

We are collectively lousy at communicating. We’re great at teasing apart complex details to arrive at complex diagnoses, but we get no instruction in breaking down complex issues to a layperson. The commonest complaint I hear from patients is that their doctors don’t talk to them, or when they do, they don’t understand what they’re saying. How is that possible? People trust us to be their expert advisers, yet we can’t, all too frequently, communicate? And if we can’t communicate on a one-to-one level to a captive and interested audience, how do we get complex issues across to the media, arguably a much less forgiving forum? Or to Congress, even less forgiving?

 

For one thing, we can teach our physicians-in-training how to engage and collaborate with colleagues, how to actively develop public policy with leaders as physician-experts, and how to unify and lead our profession. Winning a grant award for advanced subspecialty training in critical needs areas three years ago, I and John F. Toney MD developed a training experience for Hospital-Acquired Infections and Antimicrobial Stewardship with this goal in mind. As best I could determine at the time, this was the first program of its kind in the country.

 

Still new territory, the fellowship epidemiology program is a work in progress. Yet already, our antimicrobial stewardship program is paying for itself by saving over $100,000 pharmacy dollars and saving patients from the significant risks of unnecessary antibiotic exposure. And already one of our graduates has been selected to develop and run an Antimicrobial Stewardship Program at a regional hospital, with her training offering a significant advantage to her curriculum vitae. We expect to follow up closely and see what worked for her and how we can continue to improve the fellowship experience. I am certainly confident that she has more experience at this point than probably many graduating fellows this year, and much more than any had only 2 years ago. In that alone, I feel the grant program has been a huge success.

 

Take a longer view, and we can do the same much earlier, at the medical student level. We can SELECT our future leaders, by teaching them how it’s done. In fact, USF Health’s Vice Dean of Educational Affairs, Dr. Alicia Monroe, is doing just that through the exciting and innovative SELECT MD Program (Scholarly Excellence. Leadership Experiences. Collaborative Training.). In partnership with Lehigh Valley Health Network in Allentown, PA, LeHigh Valley medical students will spend their first 2 years at USF in SELECT training, then complete clinical studies back at home.

 

I just cannot wait to see where they all go from there. I am so proud of our visionary ID Division and University. Be the change!

[Previously published on Infectious Bytes on September 11, 2011]

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Last words on the Case of the Neti Pot Naegleria

LA State Epidemiologist, Raoult Ratard MD, MPH & TM, MS, FACPM, kindly corresponded with me regarding the case of the 28 year old man who died of Naegleriafowleri meningoencephalitis this summer.   The case was unusual in that he did not have any history of exposure to natural surface waters, such as swimming, tubing, diving or fishing. He did, however, have a history of sinus infection and the use of a neti pot to rinse his sinuses, a technique recommended often and with success for sinus problems by otolaryngologists and infectious disease subspecialists.  The Health Department investigated several environmental sites of potential exposure, including home water, local plants and city water. While benign amoebae, Hartmanella and Vannella, were cultured from shower and kitchen spray nozzles, Naegleria was demonstrated by culture and N. fowleri RT-PCR in the hot water heater. Recall that N. fowleri survives best at 80-115 degrees Fahrenheit. Unfortunately I have no documentation of what temperature his water heater was set to. The results of environmental testing are given below, graciously supplied and published with the permission of Dr. Raoult:


[Originally posted on Infectious Bytes, the Blog, on September 9, 2011]

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Gompf’s Top Ten Most Influential Events in ID…An Evolving Work

Here’s my running tally, in order of importance (IMHO), & a page to make you think & do your own research. How they are influential? What other events did they lead to? How did they effect society? What others might you consider (…many others may be considered!) ? Comment with your thoughts! :}

1. Alteration of ecology by economic globalization and climate changes spread diseases to new continents and higher latitudes, forcing us to think outside of old boxes to stay ahead of them. Can we?
2. Water sanitation and chlorination of public water supplies.
3. Just in time for HIV, smallpox is eradicated from the world by 1978.
4. The HIV virus evolves from simian immune deficiency virus, “jumps” to humans, and the present day pandemic begins in 1979.
5. The basic tenets of infection control are established, by Florence Nightingale, Ignaz Semmelweiss, and Joseph Lister. “Cleanliness is next to godliness.”
6. Dr. Louis Pasteur proposes the Germ Theory in 1890.
7. Development and federal support for mass childhood vaccination.
8. Penicillin is isolated in 1928. The Antibiotic Era is born.
9. The Spanish Influenza Pandemic of 1918-1919. It takes more lives than the 4-year plague of Black Death during the Middle Ages. Over half of military deaths during WW I are due to influenza.
10. The discovery that infectious agents may cause apparently non-infectious illnesses: Helicobacter pylori (gastric cancer), Human Papilloma Virus (cervical cancer—vaccine-preventable now!), Epstein Barr Virus (B cell lymphoma), etc.
Future top 10 events (?):
• Mobile technology and real-time medical information sharing (including data about epidemics as they occur).
• Medical genomics – the science of how individual genetics determine susceptibility to disease, response to drugs, and more.

[First published on Infectious Bytes, the Blog, on September 8, 2011]

 

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A Eulogy For The Autopsy…And A Call For Its Return

Evidence-based medicine and health insurers generally focus on what’s medically necessary, not what’s epidemiologically relevant, not what soothes the mind of the bereaved or of the physician grieved and mystified by the loss of a patient. Once the autopsy was a venerated tool for medical advancement and humility. An invaluable means of learning one’s own limitations and the extraordinary diversity in nature and human physiology, it has now become an unreimbursed after-thought. An irrelevant thing, especially since the patient is already dead, there are living patients to care for, and people just need to “move on”.  And it just doesn’t pay to know that your diagnosis premortem was wrong; it only adds fuel to the malpractice attorney’s fire, which further fuels already skyrocketing malpractice insurance premiums. In life, a diagnosis based on assumptions is unacceptable. There are tests that must be run, high tech imaging, much probing and invading. Yet in death, an assumed cause is what goes on the death certificate well over 90% of the time.

But what if the diagnosis was wrong? what if the examination missed something? What if a clue was misinterpreted? What if the guidelines-sanctioned pneumonia protocol didn’t work, and why? What if all the probing, and imaging, and blood draws didn’t yield the answer? These don’t indicate malpractice, they indicate a gap in knowledge. We should be thirsting for this knowledge, yet we throw away the opportunities to improve  every day.

I propose that the autopsy is more relevant than ever. That the dead can indeed live and speak through a thoughtful pathologist’s hands and eyes. That more than ever, doctors need to know what they are missing with all the bells, whistles, drugs, and treatment guidelines at their disposal. I have never found an autopsy on one of my patients to be less than a profoundly humbling and highly educating experience.

Moreover, I have never experienced such reverence, humility, and deep gratitude than I did in reading my 10 year old son’s autopsy report. It was the very hardest thing I have ever read. Yet I felt for the pathologist who performed my son’s autopsy a gratefulness as profound as for the obstetrician who delivered him. Indeed, for a few moments of crystalline time, it was as if my son was given life and voice, reaching out through the dryly graphic account to tell the true story surrounding his death. That voice was resonant and life-altering, as pure and true as it was the first time I heard his cry.

I still think of the pathologist who performed his autopsy and drafted his carefully detailed report, with deep reverence and affection, for giving my son his voice. For giving me the gift of the truth.  I keep his report in a memory book with Philip’s things.

Autopsy 101: The Decline in Autopsy Rates
[This post was first published on Infectious Bytes, the Blog, on August 28, 2011]
 

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Trojan Trophs & Guerilla Germs. What’s under-the-radar might invade you.

Unfortunately, pathogens living in home or institutional water piping, chlorinated or not, aren’t a new problem. Legionella (cause of Legionnaire’s pneumonia), Mycobacterium avium (a cousin of tuberculosis that causes a similar but not contagious pneumonia), and various fungi are known to have been acquired from home water or hot tubs. It’s one of the reasons that it’s best to keep your water heater at 140 degrees F—high enough to kill Legionella (if you run the water at that temperature for 10 minutes at each faucet), but not high enough to scald a child who accidently turns the hot faucet on.

We live in a delicate balance as an integral member of the world ecosystem, with some ingredients of the bacterial soup surrounding us playing major roles in priming our immunity, while others posing threats if given the right opportunity.

Free-living amoebae have lived comfortably under the radar for many people outside of medicine and science, and even the majority of those in medicine and science. When I was a kid and fascinated with science, I examined pond water with a microscope, drawn to the meanderings of those protozoa and knowing nothing of what they could do. Yet here and there, we see people affected with amoebic keratitis—a melting cornea dissolved by Acanthamoeba that have found a home in various contact lens solution brands over recent years, or in soft lenses due to innocently inadequate hygiene. Of increasing interest is the prevalence of free-living amoeba in household water, and the unsettling fact is that, yes, there are more free-living beasties in our tap water than we would otherwise expect.

OK, fine, but now what about amoebic Trojan horses that not only carry pathogenic bacteria beyond our borders undetected, but also give aid and comfort to the enemy, and train and arm them, too? Amoebae normally live by “eating” bacteria (or rather surrounding them with extensions of their cellular substance & enzymatically digesting them) in the soil and water that surrounds us. Yet it appears that some pathogens, Legionella & Vibrio, may not be digested, but rather begin to replicate more aggressively. They also are prompted somehow (genes switched on by the amoeba’s attack? chemical stimuli?) to produce more virulence tools, like toxins that allow them to invade tissues, or mechanisms that help them evade immunity. These survivors THRIVE in amoebae. The amoebae seclude them from the elements while they replicate more rapidly than before they were “eaten”. If they escape by rupturing their watery host or are taken up by another host along with the amoeba—say, a human who swallows them in water—they may in fact 1) have reached high enough numbers to cause disease, and 2) have started producing more toxin or virulence mechanisms to create worse disease than they could have before the amoeba ate them.

Is this some ingenious quirk of evolution, that bacteria like Legionnella and Vibrio may well have happened upon a way to outsmart their protozoan predators? And become stronger yet through the ordeal? Have these bacteria somehow managed–without advanced brains or tools–to become guerilla pathogens? Invading in small numbers, evading detection in bystander protozoa, while amassing armies in our faucets??

And should we be considering increased water sanitation? How should we do that, since amoeba respond to hostile environments by encysting themselves into an impervious ball until the threat passes? Could cracks in pipes introduce amoebae into our water after treatment? What effect does home filtration of chlorine have on the safety of our home water supplies? Should we be screening our water supply for amoebae, as well as the usual suspects, like coliforms and other bacteria? Boggles the mind, doesn’t it? How much we have yet to discover??

[Follow-up on the Neti Pot Naegleriae - Got some contact info & hope to report more details on that case as they develop.]

References:

Stockman LJ, Wright CJ, Visvesvara GS, Fields BS, Beach MJ. Prevalence of Acanthamoeba spp. and other free-living amoebae in household water, Ohio, USA–1990-1992. Parasitol Res. 2011 Mar;108(3):621-7. Epub 2010 Oct 27. PubMed PMID: 20978791.

Shoff ME, Rogerson A, Kessler K, Schatz S, Seal DV. Prevalence of Acanthamoeba and other naked amoebae in South Florida domestic water. J Water Health. 2008 Mar;6(1):99-104. PubMed PMID: 17998610.

http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/69299/title/Amoebas_in_drinking_water_a_double_threat

[First published on Infectious Bytes, the Blog, on August 19, 2011]

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Naegleria meningoencephalitis from water sports is bad enough—but a neti pot??

The third case of amoebic meningoencephalitis this year, in Louisiana, was even more unusual than most. It was a young man whose death in June was traced to the tap water he used in a device called a neti pot — a small teapot-shaped container used to rinse out the nose and sinuses with saltwater to relieve allergies, colds and sinus trouble…Health officials later found the amoeba in the home’s water system. The problem was confined to the house, according to Louisiana’s state epidemiologist.

“3 die of rare brain infection from amoeba in water – Seattle Times”

This brings up a recent listserv discussion about neti pots. I love mine; they are a low tech solution to the common problems of allergic rhinitis and sinus infections. However, my neti pot instructions mentioned NOTHING whatsoever about using purified or distilled or boiled water. I have boiled my water & kept it in an airtight gallon jug in my bathroom, given what I know about faucets.

Which is that faucets grow microbes in spite of chlorinated water.

I imagine further, that if you have a water filtration system that filters minerals from your water before it enters the house, like ours, the water is even more likely to grow microbes in the pipes and water that pools in the faucets or shower heads. What’s to keep amoebae from splashing up and setting up house in your faucet if you happen to be someone who uses the kitchen sink to wash up after gardening, or fishing in your lake, or going wake boarding? What if you’re immune suppressed and don’t know it? Or genetically predisposed to amoebic infection? (The genomics of infection is in a period of exponential growth) And you rinse your nose while washing your face, as some people do? Or get water up your nose as you bathe or shower?

Hmmm…Note to self: Add inadequate neti pot water purification to the list of potential risks for amoebic meningoencephalitis, which include:

 

  • Fresh water swimming, water sports such as wakeboarding/waterskiing
  • Natural fresh water lakes, rivers at 80-115 degrees F
  • Hot springs at 80-115F
  • Inadequately chlorinated pools or hot tubs—should I wonder about toddler wading pools filled with lawn hoses, too??

It simply sucks to be me. A couple weeks ago, our 7 year old left a hose running in our pool overnight flooded the pool for many hours. We kept the kids out of the pool until my husband was able to take the water to be tested for chlorine levels and correct the chemistry. Whew!

And now, inadequately treated TAP water used in neti pots or other sinus irrigation systems. OY.

[Originally published on Infectious Bytes, the Blog, on August 18, 2011]

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Physicians as Leaders-The time is now or never

For the past couple of decades, IMHO, American physicians have ironically entrusted the wellness of the American healthcare system, the protection of patients’ rights, and the fair and reasonable livelihoods of both private and academic practice physicians to everyone but those who know our patients’ needs and our own weaknesses best: us. The result has been the devaluation of the physician-patient relationship, the intrusion of the “insurance” middleman into every aspect of healthcare, profit-driven direct-t0-patient pharmaceutical marketing, and our own re-branding as “providers” and patients as “consumers”. We cannot perform and bill for our own Gram stains in the office, for example, regardless of experience and training. I perceive that we are losing more and more confidence in our clinical skills as everyone and their brother questions what we do on sites such as WrongDiagnosis.com; we are more likely than ever to over-order high tech studies. Even when we know that a diagnosis is directly under our noses—as directly detected by our hands—we are more likely to order “confirmatory” tests that don’t add quality, but may soothe our own risk-averse nerves and provide anticipatory defense in the medical record.

I speak from more than the personal experience of being a physician. I speak as a patient, as a mother whose child died in an ICU, as the primary support and decision-maker for an elderly, demented mother on Medicaid, as the primary beneficiary for our family’s health insurance coverage. And I am fed up on all sides.

I just watched the College of Medicine Class of 2011 graduate. I’ve said for some years that medical schools have been failing to produce physicians who understand and can clearly engage non-medical politicians and voters to drive rational and effective healthcare policy. I’ve seen USF Health take up that challenge, and I think it’s working. As they enter their internships, this class is rightfully concerned, yet optimistic, and even more than any class I’ve seen before, motivated to work toward a win-win that centers on the physician-patient collaboration. As I listened to them express their hopes and fears for the long road ahead, I felt a hope and pride for these budding leaders and for those of us who will be their patients that I haven’t felt in a long time. The next few years, maybe decade, will shape our future healthcare system and the care that you and I, our patients and those we love, will receive. Godspeed, Doctors, godspeed.

Tune in to 6 minutes of excellent real-world commentary by Barry Silbaugh, MD, MS, FACPE, CEO of the American College of Physician Executives, “Why are physician leaders so badly needed, and how do we get there?”, at http://quantiamd.com/player/pspkfcp?cid=968&u=bisjsq

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Symbology of the GIDP Logo

What does it all mean??? :D

 

the blue lotus – Perfection, knowledge, wisdom, eternal rebirth, perseverence

the pearls – Droplets of wisdom, or perhaps, chains of cocci!

the arrangement of the pearls – evokes the “gesture of discussion”, or the Vitarka mudra, a hand gesture wherein the right thumb and forefinger are brought together, with the other fingers straightened. It signifies discussion and teaching in buddhist traditions

a “g” in “American Typewriter” font – In honor of the original pages of the “ID pearls”. Or maybe ’cause I just like “old-fashioned” fonts. :)

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