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Brain eating amoeba victim recovering (PHOTO)

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Making strides: Doctors believe early detection and experimental treatments are helping Kali get over her infection

Details Emerge About Teen Girl who Survived Deadly Brain-Eating Amoebas

A young tween named Kali Hardig went with her family to a water park in mid-July which turned out to be nearly fatal for the young girl. She ended up getting infected by the deadly brain-eating amoeba known formally as Naegleria fowleri. Since the late 1960s, of the 100 reported cases of N. fowleri infection, only two people had survived.

Doctors did not give the Hardig family much hope, but they also remained undaunted in their treatment of the twelve-year-old girl. Her pediatrician at the critical care unit in Arkansas, Dr. Jerril Greene, said that some actions taken early on by the doctors likely made the difference as her life hung in the balance.

For starters, the doctors lowered her body temperature to prevent her fever from inducing brain swelling. At one point, her body temperature was lowered to 91.4 which well below the 95 degrees at which hypothermia can occur.

Ultimately, it was the use of an experimental breast cancer drug that ended up turning back the infection of the amoebas which eat away at brain tissue. It should be noted that Miss Hardig was very lucky to have survived. Another young boy in Florida was administered the same drug in an attempt to kill the brain-eating amoeba, but the drug was ineffective and he passed away.

Original Story Below

Brain Eating Warning

A rare brain eating amoeba has been found in various pools of freshwater across the United States.

The deadly amoeba, known as primary amoebic meningoencephalitis, breeds in warm, stagnant waters. The disease has an extremely high mortality rate; approximately 99%. Of the diagnosed case so far, there have been only two survivors. Primary amoebic meningoencephalitis is an extremely rare; in the past 50 years, there have only been approximately 130 diagnosed cases of the disease in the United States.

There are currently two confirmed cases of the disease in the United States. 12 year old Zachary Reyna from Florida contracted the disease while kneeboarding with friends in a ditch near his house, reports the Daily Mail.

“He’s fighting and he’s strong, he’s really really strong,” said brother Brandon Villarreal.

On Facebook, his brother says Zachary had surgery to remove pressure from his brain. At a vigil Tuesday – cheers of support from Zachary’s baseball teammates.

The other case was diagnosed in another 12 year old, Kali Hardig, located in Arkansas. Kali contracted the deadly bacteria while swimming at a waterpark on July 19th.

Hardig, who’s out of a coma and now in fair condition at Arkansas Children’s Hospital, is only one of three American’s to survive the deadly bacteria in the past 50 years.

According to ABC News, doctors cooled her body down to try to reduce the swelling. They also won clearance to treat her with a breast-cancer drug, Heulitt said.

“She wound up being on the ventilator for over two weeks,” Heulitt said. But she’s since made incredible progress.

Kali can now breathe on her own. Though she can’t talk yet, she’s able to write her name and respond to doctors and her family. And tests show no signs of the parasite in her system.

“We’ve went from being told that our little girl wouldn’t survive this amoeba to now they’re saying that Kali is going to be the third survivor and going to get to go home,” Traci Hardig said.

Hardig’s mother posted a message about Reyna on the Prayers For Kali Facebook page:

Kali and I are asking for you all to add Zachary to your prayers. Zachary is a 12 year old boy in FL battle the same thing Kali has. We want prayers 4 # 4 !!!! You got this!!!! Kali’s Krew loves you and is supporting you all the way!! Slow and steady wins the race!

“This infection is one of the most severe infections that we know of,” Dr. Dirk Haselow of the Arkansas Department of Health told CNN affiliate WMC-TV about Kali’s case. “Ninety-nine percent of people who get it die.”

Sufferers frequently experience few initial symptoms, lowering the prognosis rate for those affected. Kali’s condition was diagnosed relatively early when she was brought into the emergency room with a fever shortly after her trip to the water park. Zachary remains in the hospital continuing to battle against the deadly disease.

For those planning on swimming in fresh waters during the hot summer months, it is recommended to use a nose plug and keep one’s head above water.

According to ABC News, there have been nearly 130 cases reported in the United States since 1962. Before Kali, there was only one known U.S. survivor, plus another nonfatal case documented in Mexico.

The brain-eating warning story is developing.

Making strides: Doctors believe early detection and experimental treatments are helping Kali get over her infection

Making strides: Doctors believe early detection and experimental treatments are helping Kali get over her infection

aegleria fowleri /n???l??ri?/ is a free-living excavate form of protist typically found in warm bodies of fresh water, such as ponds, lakes, rivers, and hot springs. It is also found in soil, near warm-water discharges of industrial plants, and unchlorinated or poorly chlorinated swimming pools in an amoeboid or temporary flagellate stage. There is no evidence of this organism living in salt water. It is an amoeba belonging to the groups Percolozoa or Heterolobosea.

aegleria fowleri /n???l??ri?/ is a free-living excavate form of protist typically found in warm bodies of fresh water, such as ponds, lakes, rivers, and hot springs. It is also found in soil, near warm-water discharges of industrial plants, and unchlorinated or poorly chlorinated swimming pools in an amoeboid or temporary flagellate stage. There is no evidence of this organism living in salt water. It is an amoeba belonging to the groups Percolozoa or Heterolobosea.

On The Web:
http://www.wtsp.com/news/article/331300/81/Arkansas-girl-survives-brain-eating-amoeba

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