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Israeli boy hospitalized with suspected brain-eating amoeba

The boy is sedated and on a respirator at Ziv Medical Center in Safed.

Using the direct fluorescent antibody (DFA) staining technique, this photomicrograph depicts histopathologic characteristics associated with a case of amebic meningoencephalitis due to Naegleria fowleri parasites. Naegleria fowleri infects people when water containing the ameba enters the body through the nose, typically when people go swimming or diving in warm freshwater places like lakes and rivers. The ameba then travels up the nose to the brain, where it destroys the brain tissue. Credit: Courtesy CDC/Dr. Govinda S. Visvesvara, 1980. Photo by Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images.
Using the direct fluorescent antibody (DFA) staining technique, this photomicrograph depicts histopathologic characteristics associated with a case of amebic meningoencephalitis due to Naegleria fowleri parasites. Naegleria fowleri infects people when water containing the ameba enters the body through the nose, typically when people go swimming or diving in warm freshwater places like lakes and rivers. The ameba then travels up the nose to the brain, where it destroys the brain tissue. Credit: Courtesy CDC/Dr. Govinda S. Visvesvara, 1980. Photo by Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images.

A 10-year-old Israeli has been hospitalized with encephalitis suspected of being caused by an extremely rare brain-eating amoeba, the country’s Health Ministry announced on Wednesday.

The boy is sedated and on a respirator at Ziv Medical Center in Safed.

Lab tests were being conducted for Naegleria fowleri, which thrives in waters ranging from 35 to 42 degrees Celsius (95 to 108 degrees Fahrenheit) and infects humans only in rare cases.

Earlier this month, a 26-year-old Israeli man died of a fowleri infection. He is suspected to have contracted it while swimming in the Sea of Galilee near Tiberias.

The death was the second case ever reported in Israel and the first time the amoeba had been found in a living patient.

The first case of Naegleria fowleri was diagnosed in August 2022 at Poriya Medical Center near Tiberias in a deceased patient. The amoeba is only diagnosed about 10 times a year in the United States.

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