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Home | India | Kerala Boy Makes Historic Recovery From Dual Fatal Brain Infections

Kerala boy makes historic recovery from dual fatal brain infections

A 17-year-old boy in Kerala has become the world’s first known survivor of simultaneous infections by amoebic meningoencephalitis and Aspergillus flavus. After two surgeries and three months of treatment, the patient made a full recovery, Kerala Health Minister Veena George announced

By PTI
Published Date - 3 September 2025, 05:15 PM
Kerala boy makes historic recovery from dual fatal brain infections
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Thiruvananthapuram: Kerala’s health sector has achieved a rare feat by successfully treating a 17-year-old boy who was simultaneously infected with amoebic meningoencephalitis and Aspergillus flavus, Health Minister Veena George said on Wednesday.

She said this was the first known case in the world where a patient with both infections had been treated successfully and made a full recovery. “The boy was under treatment at Alappuzha Medical College Hospital for three weeks and was then shifted to Thiruvananthapuram Medical College. The neurosurgery team conducted surgeries on the patient, and he has now completely recovered after three months of treatment,” George told reporters.


The microbiology lab at Alappuzha identified the disease-causing amoeba and fungus from the patient’s spinal fluid, following which treatment was initiated in line with government guidelines, she said. An MRI scan showed pus in the brain, and the patient was shifted to Thiruvananthapuram, where a neurosurgery team operated. As his condition worsened, a second surgery was performed, after which the boy began to recover.

“We also used five drugs for the treatment, as both infections are fatal. We reviewed the patient three weeks after discharge, and he is perfectly normal now,” said Dr Aravind, Associate Professor, Department of Infectious Diseases, Thiruvananthapuram Medical College.

George said that while several cases of patients with both amoebic meningitis and Aspergillus flavus infections had been reported worldwide, none had survived. “This is the first time such a patient has been brought back to life. I would like to congratulate the medical teams in both Alappuzha and Thiruvananthapuram medical colleges for this achievement,” she added.

She credited treatment guidelines formulated by the government three years ago for helping save the boy’s life. “Such cases—either amoebic meningitis or Aspergillus flavus infections—carry around 99 per cent mortality worldwide. In Kerala, in the past two years, 86 cases of amoebic meningoencephalitis have been reported, with 21 deaths. This is a mortality rate of around 23 to 24 per cent,” the minister said.

On whether such infections were rising in Kerala, she said: “The answer is that we have been able to identify the cases early. In post-mortem studies of meningitis deaths where the cause of infection was not identified earlier, about 11 per cent were due to amoeba.” She said Kerala has responded effectively to such cases, undertaking preventive measures with the help of other departments and local bodies, including chlorination of wells.

The health department has also issued advisories and run awareness campaigns on preventing amoebic infections. “At present, two districts—Thiruvananthapuram and Kozhikode—have active amoebic meningitis cases, with 11 each. All microbiology labs in medical colleges are now equipped to detect the infection. We have also developed the capacity to carry out PCR tests to identify the type of amoeba, and this facility is now available at our Public Health Lab,” George said.

The extremely lethal central nervous system infection, amoebic meningoencephalitis, is caused by free-living amoebae. This deadly infection is typically contracted from freshwater sources such as lakes, rivers, and streams. Aspergillus infection is an illness caused by a common fungus called Aspergillus, which is commonly found in the environment.

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