LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — A kind of meningitis caused by a 
brain-eating amoeba called Naegleria fowleri is incredibly rare, but 
it's almost always fatal.
So it's remarkable that 12-year-old Kali
 Hardig is alive and responsive after she was diagnosed with such a case
 last month in Arkansas.
"Up to Kali's case, there were only two 
reported survivors," said Dr. Mark Heulitt, one of the doctors who 
treated her. "Now, Kali's the third."
There have been nearly 130 
cases reported in the United States since 1962, according to the Centers
 for Disease Control and Prevention. Before Kali, there was only one 
known U.S. survivor, plus another nonfatal case documented in Mexico.
Health officials say Kali's success is due in large part to experimental treatment and early detection and diagnosis.
Kali's
 mother, Traci Hardig, brought her to Arkansas Children's Hospital with a
 nasty fever on July 19 — not long after Kali went swimming at a water 
park in central Arkansas.
The state Department of Health has said 
that now-shuttered park, which features a sandy-bottomed lake, is likely
 where Kali came into contact with the amoeba.
Naegleria
 fowleri (pronounced nuh-GLEER'-ee-uh FOW'-lur-ee) is often found in 
warm bodies of freshwater, such as lakes, rivers and hot springs. The 
amoeba typically enters the body through the nose as people are swimming
 or diving. It can then travel to the brain, causing a devastating 
infection called primary amebic meningoencephalitis, or PAM. That's what
 Kali has been battling.
Initial symptoms usually start within one
 to seven days and may include headache, fever, nausea and vomiting. The
 disease progresses rapidly, and other symptoms can include stiff neck, 
confusion, loss of balance, seizures and hallucinations.
Moreover, the infection destroys brain tissue and can cause brain swelling and death.
So,
 in Kali's case, doctors cooled her body down to try to reduce the 
swelling. They also won clearance to treat her with a breast-cancer 
drug, Heulitt said.
"She wound up being on the ventilator for over two weeks," Heulitt said. But she's since made incredible progress.
Kali
 (pronounced KAY'-lee) can now breathe on her own. Though she can't talk
 yet, she's able to write her name and respond to doctors and her 
family. And tests show no signs of the parasite in her system.
She still has weeks of rehabilitation ahead of her, but for now, her family is celebrating her triumphs.
"We've
 went from being told that our little girl wouldn't survive this amoeba 
to now they're saying that Kali is going to be the third survivor and 
going to get to go home," Traci Hardig said.
Hardig, who lives in 
the nearby suburb of Benton, beamed as she talked the strength and 
perseverance Kali has shown in the past few weeks.
It's not hard to see where Kali gets it from.
While Kali has been recovering from her rare case of meningitis, Traci Hardig has been battling breast cancer.
"It's
 kind of a battle to decide that you want to put your health on hold 
because you want to totally focus on Kali, but I know I have to try to 
get myself better too, because Kali's coming home and I'm going to get 
to take care of her," she said.
But Hardig doesn't dwell on her own challenges.
Instead,
 she thanks the people around the world who have sent prayers and good 
wishes to Kali, and she's trying to raise awareness for another 
12-year-old battling PAM in Florida.
Zachary
 Reyna is being treated in the intensive care unit at Miami Children's 
Hospital. Family members told reporters that he was infected while knee 
boarding with friends in a ditch near his family's home in LaBelle 
earlier this month.
"We're praying for him to be survivor number four," Hardig said
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