Division of Parasitic Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Epidemiol Infect. 2010 Jul;138(7):968-75. doi: 10.1017/S0950268809991014. Epub 2009 Oct 22.
Naegleria fowleri, a free-living, thermophilic amoeba ubiquitous in the environment, causes primary amoebic meningoencephalitis (PAM), a rare but nearly always fatal disease of the central nervous system. While case reports of PAM have been documented worldwide, very few individuals have been diagnosed with PAM despite the vast number of people who have contact with fresh water where N. fowleri may be present. In the USA, 111 PAM case-patients have been prospectively diagnosed, reported, and verified by state health officials since 1962. Consistent with the literature, case reports reveal that N. fowleri infections occur primarily in previously healthy young males exposed to warm recreational waters, especially lakes and ponds, in warm-weather locations during summer months. The annual number of PAM case reports varied, but does not appear to be increasing over time. Because PAM is a rare disease, it is challenging to understand the environmental and host-specific factors associated with infection in order to develop science-based, risk reduction messages for swimmers.
福氏耐格里阿米巴,一种自由生活的嗜热变形虫,在环境中无处不在,会引起原发性阿米巴脑膜脑炎(PAM),这是一种罕见但几乎总是致命的中枢神经系统疾病。虽然已经在全球范围内记录了 PAM 的病例报告,但尽管有大量接触可能存在福氏耐格里阿米巴的淡水的人,却很少有人被诊断出患有 PAM。自 1962 年以来,美国有 111 例 PAM 病例患者经州卫生官员前瞻性诊断、报告和证实。与文献一致的是,病例报告显示,福氏耐格里阿米巴感染主要发生在以前健康的年轻男性身上,他们在夏季暴露于温暖的娱乐水中,特别是湖泊和池塘,这些水通常位于温暖的地区。每年 PAM 病例报告的数量各不相同,但似乎并没有随着时间的推移而增加。由于 PAM 是一种罕见疾病,因此很难了解与感染相关的环境和宿主特异性因素,以便为游泳者制定基于科学的、降低风险的信息。