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    Home»Georgia

    Parents of boy who died from ‘brain-eating amoeba’ say they are ‘terrified it will happen to someone else’

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    By News Team on July 30, 2025 Georgia, South Carolina
    Parents of boy who died from ‘brain-eating amoeba’ say they are ‘terrified it will happen to someone else’
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    Cliff Notes

    • A 12-year-old boy, Jaysen Carr, died from a brain infection caused by the amoeba Naegleria fowleri after swimming in Lake Murray, South Carolina, raising safety concerns about popular recreational waters.
    • His parents were unaware of the amoeba’s presence in the lake and expressed fears that other families are at risk while enjoying water activities.
    • Naegleria fowleri infections are extremely rare, with over 95% mortality among those affected; symptoms can escalate rapidly, often resulting in death within days of onset.

    Parents of boy who died from ‘brain-eating amoeba’ say they are ‘terrified it will happen to someone else’ | US News

    The parents of a 12-year-old boy who died from due to a “brain-eating amoeba” say they are “terrified it will happen to someone else”.

    Jaysen Carr died two weeks after swimming in one of South Carolina’s most popular lakes, when the single-celled organism naegleria fowleri entered his body through his nose.

    His parents say they had no idea the organism – also known as the brain-eating amoeba – existed in Lake Murray, around 15 miles (24km) west of Columbia.

    “I can’t believe we don’t have our son. The result of him being a child was losing his life. That does not sit well. And I am terrified it will happen to someone else,” Clarence Carr told The Associated Press (AP).

    “My son lost his life swimming. We assumed it was safe,” he added.

    Friends remember the good times

    Friends invited Jaysen and his family to the lake on the 4 July holiday weekend, where he spent hours swimming, fishing and riding on an inner tube that was being pulled by a boat.

    A few days later, Jaysen’s suffered headaches which got worse and then became nauseous, disoriented and lethargic.

    The amoeba was in his brain, already causing an infection and destroying brain tissue. It entered his nose, as he played in the water, and travelled along his olfactory nerve into his brain.

    The amoeba caused an infection called primary amebic meningoencephalitis.

    Fewer than 10 people a year get it in the US, and more than 95% of them die, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

    A two-year-old boy died from the same infection in Nevada, after visiting a natural hot spring in July 2023, while in the same month, a swimmer from Georgia also died.

    Among other incidents, one in March 2023 involved a man from Florida who died after rinsing his nose with tap water, and in August 2022, a child died after swimming in the Elkhorn River in eastern Nebraska.

    The amoeba is found in warm water. It cannot move from one person to another.

    A GoFundMe page has raised $53,310 (£39,924) to help Jaysen’s family pay for unexpected expenses.

    What is the ‘brain-eating amoeba’?

    Naegleria fowleri is a single-celled organism which thrives in warm water (over 25C), including lakes and rivers in countries with hot, sometimes dry summers, like the US, Pakistan, and Australia.

    The amoeba enters the brain through the olfactory nerve in the nose. Once inside, it causes an infection called primary amebic meningoencephalitis.

    Symptoms start as a headache and nausea, and by the time the pain becomes severe, it is almost always too late to save the infected person.

    Most deaths happen within five days of getting sick, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

    Of the 167 cases reported in the US between 1962 and 2024, only four people have survived.

    Boys seem more susceptible, perhaps because they are more likely to jump and dive into the water.

    The only way to be completely safe is to not swim in lakes or rivers and, if you do, keep your head above water.

    The amoeba is fairly common but researchers are still trying to understand why some people appear more susceptible to the deadly infection than others.

    Mr Carr has questioned whether anyone on the lake had any clue about the danger in that water.

    “There are entire families out there on pontoon boats, jumping off, just like our kids were having the time of their lives,” he said.

    “It very well could be their last moments, and they are unaware of it.”

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