Lawande R V, Macfarlane J T, Weir W R, Awunor-Renner C
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 1980 Jan;29(1):21-5. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1980.29.21.
A fatal case of primary amebic meningoencephalitis (PAME) in a 35-year-old Nigerian Muslim farmer is described. The disease was contracted during ritual washing before prayers, which involved the sniffing of water up his nose to clean it. The water came from a man-made pond at his farm. The clinical presentation, isolation of the ameba from the cerebrospinal fluid and nasal passages, poor response to amphotericin B, and ultimate fatal outcome prove this to be a case of PAME. On the basis of its ability to grow at 42 degrees C, morphology of the trophozoite, cyst, and flagellate forms, animal pathogenicity, and nuclear division the ameba was identified as Naegleria fowleri. Pathogenic N. fowleri were recovered from samples of water and soil from the pond. This represents the fourth proven case of PAME from northern Nigeria.
本文描述了一名35岁尼日利亚穆斯林农民患原发性阿米巴脑膜脑炎(PAME)死亡的病例。该疾病是在祈祷前的仪式性清洗过程中感染的,清洗时需用鼻子吸水以清洁鼻腔,水取自其农场的人工池塘。临床表现、从脑脊液和鼻腔中分离出阿米巴、对两性霉素B反应不佳以及最终的致命结局,均证实这是一例PAME病例。根据其在42摄氏度下生长的能力、滋养体、包囊和鞭毛体形态、动物致病性以及核分裂情况,该阿米巴被鉴定为福氏耐格里阿米巴。从池塘的水样和土壤样本中检出了致病性福氏耐格里阿米巴。这是尼日利亚北部第四例经证实的PAME病例。