Basics
- Disease: Amoebic meningoencephalitis = rare, fatal brain infection caused by free-living amoebae.
- Causative agent:
- Naegleria fowleri → causes Primary Amoebic Meningoencephalitis (PAM).
- Balamuthia mandrillaris / Acanthamoeba → cause Granulomatous Amoebic Encephalitis (GAE).
- Mortality rate: ~95% despite treatment.
Relevance : GS II (Health – Communicable Diseases, Public Health Policy) + GS III (Environment – Climate Change & Health; Science & Tech – Emerging Diseases)

Transmission
- Amoeba enters the human body through the nose while swimming/bathing in contaminated water.
- Not transmitted person-to-person.
- Travels along olfactory nerves → brain → causes inflammation.
Symptoms
- Incubation: 5–10 days after exposure.
- Early: fever, headache, nausea, vomiting.
- Later: stiff neck, confusion, seizures, hallucinations, coma → death.
Variants
- PAM (Primary Amoebic Meningoencephalitis): acute, rapid, usually Naegleria fowleri.
- GAE (Granulomatous Amoebic Encephalitis): slower progression, linked to Acanthamoeba/Balamuthia.
Kerala Outbreak (2024–25)
- Location: Kozhikode and Malappuram districts.
- Deaths: 3 confirmed (including an infant, a 9-year-old, and a 52-year-old).
- Cases: 42 suspected; 13 under treatment, 8 in ICU.
- Likely source: contaminated well water used domestically.
- Public health response: State-wide chlorination drive for waterbodies.
Why Kerala is Seeing Cases
- Environmental factors: warm, stagnant freshwater bodies (ideal for amoeba growth).
- Behavioral factors: widespread use of untreated well water.
- Climatic factors: rising temperatures, erratic rainfall → increased microbial proliferation.
- Detection gap: under-reporting due to misdiagnosis as bacterial/viral meningitis.
Public Health Implications
- Health burden: High fatality, affects children disproportionately.
- Surveillance challenge: Rare disease → delayed diagnosis, limited lab capacity.
- Water safety crisis: Highlights gaps in rural water management.
- Psychosocial impact: Fear of “brain-eating amoeba” could trigger panic and mistrust in public water systems.
Policy & Governance Response
- Kerala Health Dept:
- Emergency surveillance and awareness campaigns.
- Chlorination of wells, ponds, water tanks.
- Gaps:
- Lack of early diagnostic infrastructure.
- Absence of national guidelines on amoebic infections.
- Weak enforcement of water quality standards in rural areas.
Way Forward
- Water safety: Regular monitoring, chlorination, deep cleaning of wells.
- Early detection: Equip district hospitals with PCR tests for amoebae.
- Treatment protocols: Stock drugs like Amphotericin B, Miltefosine.
- Community awareness: Avoid swimming in stagnant waters, ensure boiled/filtered water for infants.
- Research need: National registry on rare infections; climate-disease link studies.
- Integrated action: Converge health, local govt, water supply boards.