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Deadly ‘brain-eating’ microbe outbreak in Pakistan

PakistaniandProud

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Pakistan’s major city Karachi was struck by an outbreak of Naegleria fowleri, also known as ‘brain-eating amoeba.’ The deadly freshwater microbe kills 98 percent of those infected. The source of the infection has yet to be identified.

[MOD EDIT- no need to hatch conspiracy theories]
 
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Pakistan’s major city Karachi was struck by an outbreak of Naegleria fowleri, also known as ‘brain-eating amoeba.’ The deadly freshwater microbe kills 98 percent of those infected. The source of the infection has yet to be identified.

Should we blame America for this?

I think we should blame poor hygenic conditions and water facilities in Pakistan.
 
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LInk??
Or this thread gets closed within an hour.
 
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Deadly

There you go.

Pakistan’s major city Karachi was struck by an outbreak of Naegleria fowleri, also known as ‘brain-eating amoeba.’ The deadly freshwater microbe kills 98 percent of those infected. The source of the infection has yet to be identified.

The amoeba is transmitted from contaminated water through the nasal cavity and travels to the brain, causing inflammation. Symptoms are initially mild, including headache, stiff neck, fever and stomach pain, but after five to seven days death is likely, as no treatment for the disease has been developed.

The ongoing outbreak has claimed 10 lives, including two children. The three most recent deaths occurred last week.

Some of the cases may not have been reported since many of the city’s 18 million residents are not familiar with the disease, Dr Musa Khan, head of the WHO's Disease Early Warning System in Pakistan said on Tuesday.

The infection is usually contracted through swimming in contaminated water, but health authorities said that many of the victims of the outbreak were not swimmers.

“The three people who died in September had not been to a swimming pool. It is a serious cause for concern that people are contracting the infection by using tap water,” Health Minister Dr Sagheer Ahmed said at a press conference on Monday.

Pakistani authorities launched a public awareness campaign to inform people about precautionary measures, and to avoid sparking panic.

The city’s water supplier, the Karachi Water and Sewerage Board, announced that it increased chlorine levels at its treatment facility. The company is also taking water samples in different parts of the city in hopes of locating the source of the infection.

Naegleria fowleri can only be detected by a microscopic study of the cerebrospinal fluid, which makes it impossible to test water for contamination.

Another possible source of the outbreak is the water in mosques for Muslim ablution rituals. Most mosques use underground aquifers.

The infection first surfaced in Karachi in 2006, but was not heard of again until now.

Hope Pakistan takes the necessary steps to alleviate the issue.
 
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Naegleria fowleri enters the body through the nose. Once it enters the nose, it travels to the brain where it causes meningitis , which is usually fatal. The source of infection is contaminated water from ponds and lakes. Hope health authorities in Pakistan take action ASAP
 
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That's just scary man :sick:

Sounds like a great bio-weapon though :devil:
 
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Karachi keeps getting new Diseased from abroad,being a port city and too many inward,outward movements from the city...
I once went to receive a friend who was coming from Panama...
Met him at Karachi airport,took him to my flat,and went out to local restaurant for buying food as i was living alone at that time (the days of freedom).
Came back home after an hour and found him unconscious in front of the Aircon..He was sweating and i could feel the heat from some distance as he was smouldering with fever...
Picked him up and somehow dragged him to a doctor's clinic nearby . The doctor had no idea what’s wrong,but gave him an injection to lower the fever.
The injection worked,and his fever subsided in an hour..I asked him to go home ASAPas i had no way of taking care of him if his fever returned..
Hastily called a taxi,and took him back to airport and boarded him on a plane going to Multan where his house was.
Came back home and within a few hours i was smouldering with similar fever,and even worse i was all alone.I thought i will be fine,and went o bed.The next morning i woke up with no energy what so ever.It was difficult for me to get up from my bed,and had high fever.Somehow went to the same doctor,who took blood samples and asked me to ring him in the evening.
A telephone conversation with the doctor that evening revealed that my blood test report was all clear..that meant the disease i had contracted was unknown in Pakistan and definitely came from Panama via the friend i received.
I waited for 3 days and lost 4 KG of body weight . On the third day i went straight to the airport and flew back to my home town up north..
and as soon as i landed at the airport in Islamabad i started feeling better.
My fever receded in a day,but i was too weak to walk on my own for about a month,and full recovery took another two months.
I had many tests of all sorts but all came clear.
It was the sudden change in environment which killed the disease,as probably the disease was accustomed to warm humid climate being from Panama,and Karachi has warm humid climate..
But since i went to a cooler,drier place,as my home town is at some altitude,the disease couldn’t survive..

So there you go,that’s my personal experience of unknown disease in Karachi.
 
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Is headache a sign....because i am having since yesterday.....
 
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Is headache a sign....because i am having since yesterday.....

A usual symptom occurring approximately 3–7 days after infection, is loss of smell sensation. Headache can occur later on
 
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wrong place , I don't think they will get anything to eat there.....:lol:

In case you haven't noticed people are dying.....

A usual symptom occurring approximately 3–7 days after infection, is loss of smell sensation. Headache can occur later on

I have my sense of smell.... And its (microbe) in Karachi so..... The report started with ISLAMABAD made me worried.
 
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Headache is a symptom of Meningitis. One of my friends in office got Meningitis. He was having severe headache that day, and he passed out and went into a coma, as he was on his way to his hometown in a train. Thankfully people picked up his cellphone and got him admitted. Scary ****.
 
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Its rare disease and crossing blood brain barrier(BBB) is not an easy task. Treatment is available for this disease so no problem I think.
 
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