cw death

A Florida resident has died of a rare infection caused by a brain-eating amoeba after using unboiled tap water to clean their sinuses, local and federal officials say.

The Florida Health Department said the case involves a resident of Charlotte County but specific details were not immediately released. The CDC said the patient died on Monday.

The resident, whose identity has not been made public, is believed to have contracted Naegleria Fowleri after using unboiled tap water to rinse their sinuses daily, according to the CDC.

“DOH-Charlotte, as part of a multi-agency response, is continuing to investigate how this infection occurred and is working with the local public utilities to identify any potential links and make any necessary corrective actions,” the health department said.

Naegleria Fowleri can infect people when water containing the single-celled organism enters the body through the nose, usually while swimming or diving in ponds, lakes or rivers. In rare cases it can also be found in pipes connected to tap water.

“When water contaminated with Naegleria is sniffed up the nose, the ameba can travel to the brain,” according to the CDC website. “This causes the disease Primary Amebic Meningoencephalitis (PAM), which destroys brain tissue and usually results in death.”

Symptoms usually occur between 1 and 12 days after infection and may include headache, fever, nausea and vomiting. These symptoms may progress to a stiff neck, confusion, seizures and other neurological symptoms.

An infection with the brain-eating amoeba is nearly always fatal, killing 153 out of 157 patients since the early 1960s. Most cases were found in southern U.S. states, especially Texas (39) and Florida (38).

Although Naegleria Fowleri is a heat-loving ameba and is usually found in warm freshwater environments, recent infections have also been found in northern U.S. states as cooler regions have become warmer and drier.

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Always happens like once a year and freaks me out for a couple days even though I know the math.

If you’re gonna use a Nettie pot boil your water first. This is not the only reason. Also you mostly just shouldn’t use Nettie pots.

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4 points

The one time I tried using one of those it didn’t really clear the sinus infection I had

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2 points
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Lots of “stuffed” noses are actually inflamed blood vessels, which are further inflamed by all the blowing.

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1 point

I like how most of our nose related natural reflexes are self destructive

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11 points
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Can I use bottled water for shit like that or CPAP? People keep saying “bottled water is just tap water,” but I’ve been using that for my machine :scared:

distilled water is cheap, but I mean… I don’t think I want to keep buying it

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5 points

I don’t use tap water because of the incredible amount of salt in my tap water 😌

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wtf where do you live that has salt tap water? What even is the point then?

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5 points
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Bottled water has to be treated first before it’s bottled, however if you want to be safe there’s always boiling it or using water treatment pills that will dissolve.

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The cpap humidifier has to turn the water into vapor for you to breath it in I think that would kill stuff. Also you can use tap water in your cpap if you boil it first

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6 points
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11 points

The humidifier probably doesn’t get to high enough temp to sterilize it, they evaporate water through large surface area or ultrasound. Using distilled water is still better so you don’t get scale on the tank and stuff.

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16 points

The reason you use distilled water is because of mineral buildup boiling it will still leave a gross film on the chamber since the boiled water still has solutes.

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iirc flushing your sinuses works for some problems but you need to be safe about it and you probably shouldn’t do it often enough to justify owning a dedicated pot for it.

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Yeah if you’re going to flush your sinuses you’re probably better off using a saline rinse, both because they come sterile and it won’t fuck up your nose

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9 points

i had a Ear/Nose/Throat doctor suggest a netti pot, but they specified to only use boiled water or distilled water. People are talking about netti pots ITT but nobody is talking about humidifiers… are those ok I wonder? Wikipedia said the amoeba has to go through your cribiform plate, which is a porous bone between your nasopharynx and brain.

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6 points

You can get humidifiers that actually boil the water into steam to sanitize it. Costs more in electricity and initial price than an ultrasonic humidifier, but then you don’t need to use distilled water and don’t have to worry about mineral dust all over your room

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8 points

I don’t think you’ll get amoebas out of your air humidifier, but you’ll sure get legionella.

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According to a short google “There is no evidence that Naegleria fowleri can spread through water vapor or aerosol droplets, such as shower mist or through a humidifier”

You pretty much have to shoot a good amount of contaminated water up into your nasal passages

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28 points

even though I know the math.

An infection with the brain-eating amoeba is nearly always fatal, killing 153 out of 157 patients since the early 1960s. Most cases were found in southern U.S. states, especially Texas (39) and Florida (38).

ok getting it is very rare but still scary

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17 points

THE CHANCES ARE LOW BUT NEVER 0 :screm-a: AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA

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13 points

That also goes for the water quality standards for any other pathogen, the aim is to minimize the odds of catching it. Kind of disturbing if you think about it too much.

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Oh yeah if you get it you’re fucked, it’s just that getting it is winning one of the world’s worst lotteries

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