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A teenager survived an infection with a brain-eating amoeba: it got there after…

A teenager survived being infected by a brain-eating amoeba after swimming in a polluted pond.
The boy fell ill with primary amoebic meningoencephalitis, the mortality rate of which is 97%. Symptoms appeared 5 days after swimming: 14-year-old Afnan began to fall into convulsions and complain of a severe headache.
Doctors were unable to identify the disease, but the child's father remembered reading about a deadly infection that killed a boy in a neighboring Indian state.
Doctors injected a combination of antimicrobial drugs into the teenager's spine. On the first day, the patient was unconscious due to seizures. But after three days, Afnan's condition began to improve.
The boy fell ill with primary amoebic meningoencephalitis, the mortality rate of which is 97%. Symptoms appeared 5 days after swimming: 14-year-old Afnan began to fall into convulsions and complain of a severe headache.
Doctors were unable to identify the disease, but the child's father remembered reading about a deadly infection that killed a boy in a neighboring Indian state.
Doctors injected a combination of antimicrobial drugs into the teenager's spine. On the first day, the patient was unconscious due to seizures. But after three days, Afnan's condition began to improve.


