amoebiasis due to free-living amoebae
ORPHA: 68
Available Treatments (0)
No treatments linked yet
Clinical trials or compassionate use may be available — consult a specialist.
Clinical Presentation
Signs and symptoms associated with amoebiasis due to free-living amoebae, sourced from HPO and Orphanet clinical annotations.
PhotophobiaAtypical behaviorPersonality changesSeizureFeverVomitingNauseaHeadacheInfectious encephalitisAbnormal cerebrospinal fluid morphologyIncreased CSF protein concentrationCSF lymphocytic pleiocytosisBrain imaging abnormalityFacial asymmetryVisual lossDiplopiaRestlessnessIrritabilityLethargyHemiparesisConfusionAbnormal cerebellum morphologyAbnormal basal ganglia morphologyAbnormal spinal cord morphologyCerebral edemaAphasiaAbnormal midbrain morphologyAbnormal cerebral white matter morphologyIncreased intracranial pressureAbnormal cerebral cortex morphologyImmunodeficiencyAbducens palsyFourth cranial nerve palsyLoss of consciousnessAbnormal pons morphologyFacial palsyAbnormal medulla oblongata morphologyOculomotor nerve palsyAbnormal hypothalamus morphologyAbnormal brainstem MRI signal intensityIncreased red blood cell countStiff neckNuchal rigidityAbnormal cranial nerve physiologyGranulomaAbnormality of taste sensationSinusitisBlindnessAbnormality of the adrenal glandsAtaxiaComaSubcutaneous noduleMyocardial necrosisPneumoniaHyposmiaArrhythmiaRespiratory tract infectionCorneal ulcerationConjunctival hyperemiaIncreased tear productionUnusual skin infectionIntrarenal abscessEncephalomalaciaCorneal perforationOcular painPapulePustuleSkin ulcer
Classification & Codes
Orphanet Code
ORPHA:68amoebiasis due to free-living amoebae
| Orphanet | ORPHA:68 |
| Treatments | 0 drug(s) |
| Symptoms on record | 68 signs |
| Status | published |
Factual Authority
Last Updated3/20/2026
Clinical DataHPO · Orphanet
Drug DataFDA · EMA · CDSCO