News

Early diagnosis of primary amebic meningoencephalitis key to treatment


 

FROM MMWR

References

A 2014 Florida case of primary amebic meningoencephalitis (PAM) – a rare, typically fatal infection of the brain – is a reminder to physicians of the need for early diagnosis and prompt treatment of patients with suspected ameba infections.

PAM is a devastating infection caused by Naegleria fowleri, a free-living ameba found in warm, fresh water bodies throughout the world. Amebae like N. fowleri are aspirated into the nasal cavity through swimming, splashing, or nasal irrigation, and after attaching to the nasal mucosa, migrate across the cribriform plate to the brain via the olfactory nerves, causing extensive damage to the frontal lobes of the brain. In fact, only three nonfatal cases have ever been documented in the United States, according to a report in the Nov. 6, 2015, edition of the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR. 2015 Nov 6;64[43]:1226).

CDC

In August 2013, miltefosine, an antiparasitic drug with activity against N. fowleri, became available from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as an investigational drug for the treatment of free-living ameba infections in combination with other antimicrobial drugs. Miltefosine was administered as part of the successful treatment of a case of PAM in 2013, and it can be requested from the CDC upon clinical suspicion of PAM infection and before laboratory confirmation.

Peggy J. Booth of the Florida Department of Health and coauthors related the case of an 11-year-old Florida boy hospitalized with a presumptive diagnosis of viral meningitis in June 2014. The initial cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) analysis was negative for motile ameba, but 2 days later – after the boy’s condition deteriorated – a second CSF specimen revealed the presence of motile ameba. Physicians consulted with the CDC and arranged for delivery of miltefosine, but the patient died before its arrival.

Ms. Booth and coauthors recommend that physicians consider a diagnosis of PAM in persons with a clinically compatible illness who have a history of fresh water exposure 1-9 days before illness onset. Early diagnosis and prompt treatment are essential because of the high mortality rate. The CDC is currently considering strategic placement of miltefosine in Texas and Florida, where approximately half of all cases in the United States have been reported, which might reduce the time to initiating treatment associated with transport of the medication.

To read the complete report in MMWR, click here.

rpizzi@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @richpizzi

Recommended Reading

Researchers pin down possible cause, source for narcolepsy associated with flu vaccine
MDedge Neurology
Uncommon strain of enterovirus causes paralytic symptoms in children
MDedge Neurology
New shingles vaccine delivers whopping efficacy
MDedge Neurology
PCV13 boosts pediatric pneumococcal meningitis antibiotic susceptibility
MDedge Neurology
Vaccine-derived polio case presents new challenges to eradication
MDedge Neurology
Jamestown Canyon virus detected in humans in Minnesota
MDedge Neurology
Ocular syphilis on the rise: What clinicians must know
MDedge Neurology
Impact of health care–associated meningitis or ventriculitis spotlighted
MDedge Neurology
Off-label prescriptions frequently cause adverse events
MDedge Neurology
Pediatric pertussis tied to minor elevation in epilepsy risk
MDedge Neurology