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The brain-eating amoeba case is rare, but it’s a wake-up call for anyone rinsing their sinuses with tap water.
The CDC said a 71-year-old woman in Texas died after contracting a brain-eating amoeba infection from using tap water to ...
A Texas woman has died after contracting a rare infection from a brain-eating amoeba while using tap water to clear out her ...
A 71-year-old woman tragically died after rinsing her sinuses with tap water from an RV campground — and experts are now sounding the alarm. The culprit? Naegleria fowleri, a rare brain-eating amoeba ...
“If water containing the ameba goes up the nose and to the brain, it can cause an infection called primary amebic ...
Summer is when families are most at risk for brain-eating amoeba. Infections are rare, almost always deadly. How to go swimming but stay safe.
A Texas woman has died after contracting a rare infection from a brain-eating amoeba while using tap water to clear out her sinuses at an RV campground, according to a recent report.
In a new clinical practice guideline, recommendations are presented for the surgical management of chronic rhinosinusitis in adults.
A woman in Texas used tap water to clean her sinuses, after which she got sick and soon died. Doctors discovered that a brain-eating amoeba had caused an infection.
A Texas woman’s death from a brain-eating amoeba after a sinus rinse with tap water highlights the risks of non-sterile water ...
A healthy 71-year-old woman died from a rare brain infection after using tap water in a neti pot, highlighting a deadly but ...
A healthy Texas woman, 71, died from Naegleria fowleri, or brain-eating amoeba, after using a nasal irrigation device with ...