• Last week, nine-year-old Hally Yust died after contracting a rare brain-eating amoeba infection while swimming near her family’s home in Kansas.

    The organism responsible, Naegleria fowleri, dwells in warm freshwater lakes and rivers and usually targets children and young adults. Once in the brain it causes a swelling called primary meningoencephalitis. The infection is almost universally fatal: it kills more than 97 percent of its victims within days. […]

    It turns out that “brain eating” is actually a pretty accurate description for what the amoeba does. After reaching the olfactory bulbs, N. fowleri feasts on the tissue there using suction-cup-like structures on its surface. This destruction leads to the first symptoms—loss of smell and taste—about five days after the infection sets in.

    From there the organisms move to the rest of the brain, first gobbling up the protective covering that surrounds the central nervous system. When the body notices that something is wrong, it sends immune cells to combat the infection, causing the surrounding area to become inflamed. It is this inflammation, rather than the loss of brain tissue, that contributes most to the early symptoms of headache, nausea, vomiting and stiff neck. Neck stiffness in particular is attributable to the inflammation, as the swelling around the spinal cord makes it impossible to flex the muscles.

    As N. fowleri consumes more tissue and penetrates deeper into the brain, the secondary symptoms set in. They include delirium, hallucinations, confusion and seizures. The frontal lobes of the brain, which are associated with planning and emotional control, tend to be affected most because of the path the olfactory nerve takes. “But after that there’s kind of no rhyme or reason—all of the brain can be affected as the infection progresses,” Cope says.

    Read Scientific American via Boing Boing

    Image courtesy of CDC / Dr. Govinda S. Visvesvara

  • July 24 marks one year until the 16th FINA World Championships in Kazan, Russia. To celebrate this occasion, the Kazan 2015 Organising Committee has prepared plenty of pleasant surprises for citizens of Kazan and people visiting the city.

    A gigantic newspaper painted on the pavement and dedicated to the 2015 FINA World Championships will be opened today, July 24, in the square near the Kazan Family Centre and kick off a series of festive events. The project is designed to raise Kazan citizens’ awareness of the upcoming World Championships and to help them unveil some interesting facts about aquatics and legendary figures engaged in water sports.

    On August 8, on the opening day of the FINA High Diving World Cup, a concert will be held in the square in front of the Palace of Farmers to celebrate ‘One Year to Go to Kazan 2015’. Ambassadors for the upcoming World Championships will be revealed at the event.

    The FINA World Championships will bring together up to 2,400 athletes who will compete in 71 medal events. It is expected that 1,800 officials from about 180 countries will visit Kazan during these days. 200 referees and judges will officiate the tournament.

    Source: FINA

  • Ann Arbor, Michigan, is the best swim city in America, according to a new study commissioned by USA Swimming and leading swimwear brand Speedo. The community claimed the highest aggregate score in categories such as percentage of active swimmers and swim clubs, number of accessible pools and volume of top-level swimmers from the area.

    The 50 Top Swim Cities, presented by Speedo, ranked San Jose-Santa Clara, California second, followed by Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina; Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk, Connecticut; San Francisco-Oakland; Fort Collins, Colorado; Madison, Wisconsin; Austin, Texas; Los Angeles-Orange County and Indianapolis.

    “It’s no surprise that Ann Arbor is the top swim city in America considering the strength of the swimming community and how many great swimmers and world record holders have come out of the area,” commented legendary former University of Michigan and Club Wolverine swimming coach, Jon Urbancheck. “I lived and coached in Ann Arbor for thirty years and I can’t think of a better place for swimming.”

    Read USA Swimming

    Photo by healthiermi

  • In the winter it’s snowballs, and in the summer it’s water bombs. Clearly whatever time of year it may be, kids will find something to throw at each other. However, while making a snowball is quick and easy, making a water bomb (or water balloon) can be a laborious process. Unless you have Bunch O Balloons, a system for filling 100 balloons with water in under a minute.

    See Gizmag and Kickstarter

  • Courtesy of Swimming Australia

  • Watch our video and learn how the athletes feel about being part of Team Scotland Aquatics for Glasgow 2014.

  • For all those looking to take up a new challenge this year and improve their swimming, Keri-anne Payne is offering her top tips to get you ready for race day!

    Whether you’re taking part in a challenge this year or just looking to refine your swimming skills, in this exclusive video Keri-anne reveals her race day preparation, from stroke technique to pre-race nutrition.

    If you’re looking for a challenge this summer to put your new skills to use, British Gas SwimBritain will be returning this year with events taking place throughout August and September at venues across the UK.

    The British Gas SwimBritain program aims to encourage more people to swim regularly.

    Everyone signing up to British Gas SwimBritain will receive two free coaching sessions, redeemable in over 100 pools across the country, access to SwimBritain coaching materials and the SwimBritain Training App  to help improve their technique and training over the summer, plus a goodie bag of t-shirt, swimming cap and event medal after they complete the challenge.

    Registrations are now open. For further information on venues, how to sign up your team and get training plans and tips, visit swimbritain.co.uk/

    Featured image courtesy of dna

  • Wow, that looks spectacular, see BLN2014 on Facebook

  • Turkish diver Åžahika Ercümen broke a new world freediving record in the variable weight without fins discipline on July 23, off the coast of the Mediterranean resort town of KaÅŸ.

    Ercümen performed a 91-meter dive in 2 minutes and 49 seconds, taking the record from another Turkish diver, Derya Can, who broke it last year.

    Following her dive, Ercümen dedicated the world record to Gaza, opening a banner reading “May Gaza breathe.”

    “There will be new world record targets, but we will have to wait for a bit. I want to dive more than 100 meters for the 100 anniversary of the military victory in the Çanakkale campaign next year,” Ercümen said.

    In the variable weight freediving discipline, athletes use a weighted sled while diving while following a rope to descend.

    The 29-year-old Ercümen entered the Guinness Book of World Records in 2011 after freediving 110 meters apnea under ice.

    Read Hürriyet Daily News and Daily Sabah