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The patient contracted Naegleria fowleri while water skiing at the Lake of the Ozarks, health officials said. Here's what we ...
The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS) announced Wednesday that a patient who was diagnosed with a rare ...
Naegleria fowleri lives in warm, fresh water and can enter the brain through the nose, where it causes inflammation and tissue death. Fewer than 200 people have contracted the amoeba since 1962, but ...
The deadly infection has been historically rare, but as climate change heats up waters and worsens flooding, research shows ...
Naegleria fowleri is a microscopic single-celled free-living ameba that can cause a rare deadly infection of the brain called ...
The case of Naegleria fowleri — the scientific term for the amoeba — marks another confirmed U.S. infection this summer after ...
A Missourian who contracted an amoeba that kills brain cells at the Lake of the Ozarks has died, the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services said Wednesday. The Department of Mental Health ...
Kansans have twice been killed by the type of brain-eating amoeba that recently infected a patient in Missouri, but officials ...
The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services confirmed a rare case of brain infection linked to Lake of the Ozarks.
A person in Missouri has been hospitalized after contracting a brain-eating amoeba, possibly after water skiing in the Lake ...
A Missouri resident has contracted a brain-eating amoeba, possibly after water skiing at the Lake of the Ozarks days prior.
Individuals become infected when water containing the amoeba enters the body through the nose from freshwater sources.