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Battling a rare brain-eating disease in an Indian state

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On the eve of Onam, 45-year-old Sobhana was brought to hospital. The doctors prescribed medicines and sent her home. However, her condition worsened at an alarming rate: unease gave way to fever, fever to violent shivering, and Sobhana died on September 5. The cause was Naegleria fowleri, also known as the brain-eating amoeba, an infection normally caught through the nose in freshwater and so uncommon that most doctors never see a case in their whole careers. In Kerala this year, more than 70 persons have been diagnosed. This single-cell organism, which often feeds on bacteria in warm freshwater, produces a near-fatal brain infection known as primary amoebic meningoencephalitis (PAM). It enters the body through the nose while swimming and quickly damages brain tissue.
 
Seventy persons already? This is becoming serious and the government needs to start taking specific measures to try and prevent more cases.
 
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