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A Texas woman has died after contracting a rare infection from a brain-eating amoeba while using tap water to clear out her ...
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 Texas woman, 71, died from Naegleria fowleri, or brain-eating amoeba, after using a nasal irrigation device with ...
A Texas woman died after using RV tap water to rinse her sinuses, and health officials say a rare brain-eating amoeba was to ...
The 71-year-old woman died after using a nasal irrigation device filled with tap water while on a campground, which had not ...
A healthy 71-year-old woman died from a rare brain infection after using tap water in a neti pot, highlighting a deadly but ...
The woman began showing symptoms such as fever, headache, and confusion within four days of using the nasal rinse.
22hon MSN
The 71-year-old developed “severe neurologic symptoms” after using a nasal irrigation device using non-boiled water ...
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.
CDC and Texas investigators said the woman developed severe neurologic symptoms, including fever, headache, and an altered ...
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Live Science on MSNDiagnostic dilemma: Cold-water rinses left 'cobblestone' growths in woman's sinusesWhat makes the case unique: Since the 1930s, exostoses in the ear canal have been associated with surfing and other water ...
According to the Cleveland Clinic, the infection has a fatality rate that is 'higher than 97% even with treatment.' ...
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