The pathogenic bacteria Burkholderia pseudomallei, which causes the potentially fatal disease melioidosis, is prevalent in Australia and southeast Asia.
In Australia, a person with melioidosis has a 20-50 per cent chance of dying once it infects the brain.
In southeast Asia, 50 per cent of the population may be positive for melioidosis and in places like Cambodia the mortality rate is as high as 50 per cent, researchers said.
The research from Griffith University and Bond University in Australia could lead to discoveries in how the common staphylococcus and acne bacterium also end up in the spinal cord, as well as how chlamydia travels to the brain in Alzheimer's patients.
It could also provide answers for common back problems where bacteria have infected the bone, causing pain that could be simply treated with antibiotics.
James St John, from Griffith University, said the bacteria could slip into your system without you even knowing it.
Associate Professor Jenny Ekberg from Bond University said it was frightening how easily and quickly the bacteria could get into the brain.
"Bacteria have been implicated as a major causative agent of some types of back pain. We now need to work out whether the bacteria that cause back pain also can enter the brainstem and spinal cord via the trigeminal nerve," said St John.
St John said the work was important as the bacteria had the potential to be used as a bioweapon and knowing how to combat it was extremely important.
"Our latest results represent the first direct demonstration of transit of a bacterium from the olfactory mucosa to the central nervous system (CNS) via the trigeminal nerve; bacteria were found a considerable distance from the olfactory mucosa, in the brain stem, and even more remarkably in the spinal cord," he said.
"These results add considerably to our understanding of this particular disease. It seems likely, however, that other bacteria may also transit from nose to CNS, although this has yet to be determined," Beacham added.
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