Next-Gen Genomic Tests Identify Brain-Eating Amoeba

New UCSF center aims to make tests more affordable and accessible to doctors

Written byNicholas Weiler-UCSF News Office
| 2 min read
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Last summer, a 74-year-old resident of San Francisco’s Chinatown was admitted to San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center with fever and disorientation, which rapidly degenerated into a coma.

Her symptoms screamed that she was suffering from encephalitis, an infection of the brain, but a series of tests and drugs – for tuberculosis, bacterial and fungal infections, even Toxoplasmosis – could neither identify the cause of infection nor do anything to resuscitate her.

She died 16 days later, her illness still a mystery to her clinicians.

Sadly, this outcome is all too common in cases of brain infection, which go unsolved six times out of 10 in California, according to a 2006 UC San Francisco study.

Biochemist Joe DeRisi, PhD and neurologist Michael Wilson, MD, of UCSF want to change that statistic, and they think they have the tools to do it.

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