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Missouri health officials are investigating how the person was exposed, but they may have been in the water at Lake of the ...
The unnamed individual is currently in intensive care in Missouri after contracting a rare and usually deadly brain infection ...
The case of Naegleria fowleri — the scientific term for the amoeba — marks another confirmed U.S. infection this summer after ...
The deadly infection has been historically rare, but as climate change heats up waters and worsens flooding, research shows ...
A person is undergoing treatment after being diagnosed with a brain-eating amoeba infection in Missouri, officials announced.
A Missouri resident has contracted a brain-eating amoeba, possibly after water skiing at the Lake of the Ozarks days prior.
A man is in the ICU after swimming in the Lake of the Ozarks, and the CDC says this amoeba can be deadly in the first 18 days ...
The amoeba is a single-celled organism that lives in hot springs, lakes and other warm freshwater bodies. The Missouri health ...
A Missouri resident has been hospitalized with a deadly brain-eating infection after possibly waterskiing in a local lake. The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services said that the patient ...
What to know about the brain-eating amoeba that killed a boy swimming in a lake Fewer than 10 cases are reported annually in the U.S., but almost all are deadly.
Officials previously announced that a person died from a brain-eating amoeba but could not verify where they were exposed to it.
A 12-year-old boy died last week in South Carolina from a rare brain-eating amoeba he contracted after swimming in a local reservoir, a lawyer for the boy’s family said in a statement on Thursday.