Swiped from the Health group--a scary article about Neti pot deaths.
http://health.yahoo.net/articles/flu/neti-pot-deaths-linked-brain-eating-amoeba-tap-waterLucinda
(31,170 posts)I don't usually read Yahoo health and I don't know what the standard is....
Why Syzygy
(18,928 posts)Neti pot scare story proves that brain-eating amoeba lurk in public water supplies
Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/034434_neti_pot_sinuses_amoeba.html#ixzz1hQNdfy4S
The Health Group watchdogs will attack anything from Natural News. I have no idea what the new standard might be. Maybe I'll try it. I have most of the controversial ones on jury blacklist.
Or feel free to offer it yourself. After a two day high, my mood has turned to foul.
Celebration
(15,812 posts)in a neti pot.
Missy Vixen
(16,207 posts)to use nothing but distilled or post-boiled water in the CPAP I use.
The neti pot went into the garbage as well...
Saokymo
(273 posts)The microbe in question is not uncommon in areas with warm bodies of water; cases of it have been reported world wide. It only causes infection through the nasal passages, so usually people catch it from swimming in natural bodies of fresh water during the warmer months. The two cases in Louisiana from this year are unique in that they contracted the infection by irrigating their sinuses with untreated tap water.
So really, the article is a good bit of common sense -- if you're going to use a neti pot, use distilled or pre-boiled water to make sure it's perfectly clean -- hyped up with a huge dose of fear stemming from two very unfortunate cases.
MH1
(18,127 posts)I'll go out and get some distilled water then. Not giving up the neti.
It would have been nice if the article had explicitly said that faucet filters are or are not good enough. But I'm pretty sure the packaging in my Brita filter says it doesn't stop all bacteria.
Celebration
(15,812 posts)Still, I am somewhat surprised they found this stuff in municipal water. It doesn't seem like it should be there, but what do I know?
I doubt if this is much of an issue in most water supplies, but better safe than sorry!
Saokymo
(273 posts)Things like heavy metals and algae, but microbes like the brain-eater here are too small to get filtered out.
It's a poorly written article, not meant to inform people much past "EBUL MICROBES IN UR WATER PANIC PANIC."