WREG.com

Scientists find brain-eating amoeba at Louisiana water sampling site

BATON ROUGE, La. –Louisiana health officials have confirmed the presence of an amoeba at a leaking sample station in the St. Bernard Parish water system, CBS New Orleans affiliate WWL reports.

The state’s Department of Health and Hospitals has asked the parish to conduct a 60-day chlorine burn to kill off the amoeba in the system.

The parish has agreed to comply “out of an abundance of caution.”

Two of the seven sites tested positive for the Naegleria fowleri amoeba, the same organism that claimed the lives of a boy from Minnesota and a California woman earlier this summer.

“One positive test was at a site at the water treatment plant before the water was treated,” reads a statement from the DHH. “The second positive test occurred at 948 Angela Street, which may have been contaminated by ground water due to a leak at the sampling station.”

Monthly reports show the water system met the requirements for disinfectant levels, according to the DHH.

Five other sites tested negative for the amoeba, and one site “did not meet the required level of disinfectant.”

Officials say the water is safe to drink, but residents are being warned not to get the water into their nose when washing, bathing or swimming.

That’s how the amoeba is transferred to the brain.

“At this point that’s a decision that the DHH has to make. We trust their expertise in this field. We do we feel that the system is fine and this was an anomaly,” said St. Bernard Parish President David Peralta.

Peralta said a vehicle hit a water sampling site in Arabi, which was never reported to officials.

He said contaminated water leaked into the sampling site but not the entire parish water system.

A state health office spokeswoman said they still need to determine the source of the contamination through testing.

The DHH will speak with CDC officials Thursday.

Three deaths from the amoeba have been reported in the last several years in Louisiana, including that of a 4-year-old who died in 2013 after visiting St. Bernard Parish.

The water system no longer tested positive for the amoeba back in February 2014.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Naegleria fowleri causes brain swelling and is fatal in 97 percent of cases.

A person may start to experience symptoms one to five days after the amoeba enters the body.

Initial symptoms include headache, fever, nausea or vomiting, followed by stiff neck, confusion, lack of attention to people and surroundings, loss of balance, seizures and hallucinations.

The illness progresses rapidly and patients often die within a week.

The CDC says the infection cannot be transferred from person to person.

The DHH released the following precautions to take when dealing with tap water in St. Bernard Parish:

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