Are you using your neti pot correctly?

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If you didn’t know better, you might think a recent report about brain-eating amoebae among sinus sufferers was taken from a horror movie, rather than a study from the Centers for Disease


Control and Prevention (CDC). But this wasn’t the first time the CDC has warned people who use neti pots to flush out their sinuses about the dangers of doing so with regular tap water. More


than a decade ago, the horrors of another brain-eating amoeba tied to nasal rinsing made news. In the CDC’s new study, published recently in _Emerging Infectious Diseases_, researchers


focused on 10 patients, average age 60, all of whom were infected with a life-threatening amoebae (Acanthamoeba spp.) commonly found in soil and many types of water, including lakes,


rivers and tap water. Although the researchers can’t say for sure how the patients were infected, two clues helped point toward the likely culprit: All 10 patients had weakened immune


systems and all 10 practiced nasal rinsing (aka nasal irrigation) , a practice otolaryngologists (ear, nose and throat doctors) consider safe and an effective alternative to prescription


drugs for preventing and treating sinus woes — when done properly. “What the CDC has done is look back and discovered that among the few people — and I emphasize few — with this rare


cerebral amoebic infection, acanthamoeba, some of them got it by diving into lakes and streams” and some got it from using a nasal rinsing device such as a neti pot, says William Schaffner,


M.D., professor of preventive medicine and infectious diseases at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine in Nashville. The surprise, the researchers noted, wasn’t that three of the 10


patients died from the infection; the surprise was that so many survived. As the study noted, while infection with these amoebae is extremely rare — affecting only three to 12 people per


year in the U.S. — 82 percent of cases are fatal. Whether diving into a lake or stream, or practicing nasal rinsing, water is essentially pushed up into the nasal passages, giving potential


pathogens like these amoebae an opportunity to work its way into your central nervous system, Schaffner explains. The risk of infection, though rare, makes sense if you’re diving into murky


waters without using a nose clip or holding your nose. But how can a centuries-old practice of nasal rinsing expose you to the same dangers? Two words: tap water. At least half of the


patients in the CDC study used tap water in their nasal rinsing practices.