Publicación Oficial de la Sociedad Ecuatoriana de Neurología, de la Liga Ecuatoriana Contra la Epilepsia y de la Sociedad Iberoamericana de Enfermedad Cerebrovascular

neurocysticercosis

 

Parenchymal brain calcified cysticercus and progression of hippocampal atrophy. Cisticerco calcificado en el parénquima cerebral y progresión de atrofia de hipocampos.

A seizure-free 74-year-old woman had a single calcified cysticercus (Figure 1), and normal hippocampi (Figure 2, upper panel). Neuroimaging exams were practiced for a study aimed to assess the association between neurocysticercosis and hippocampal atrophy (HA).1 Seven years later, a control MRI showed bilateral HA (Figure 2, lower panel). The patient remained seizure-free during the observation period.

The association between calcified cysticercus and HA in seizure-free individuals has been recognized.2 It has been postulated that repetitive episodes of inflammation from antigens released to the brain parenchyma from calcifications are responsible for remote HA. However, HA progression in these patients has not been reported. This case underscores the need of early treatment with bisphosphonates to reverse the calcification process in the brain, reducing the risk of progressive HA.3

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Cisticercos calcificados en el parénquima cerebral y daño de hipocampos. Calcified cysticerci in the brain parenchyma and hippocampal damage.

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Programas de control de cisticercosis y erradicación de epilepsia relacionada a neurocisticercosis, Cysticercosis control programs and neurocysticercosis-related epilepsy eradication

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Neurocisticercosis, Epilepsia y Uso de Drogas Antiparasitarias. Neurocysticercosis, Epilepsy And The Use Of Antiparasitic Drugs.

Cysticidal drugs have been used for more than three decades. However, its efficacy has been questioned on the assumption that cysts would die spontaneously, and thus, inflammatory reactions related to therapy are unnecessary. In addition, isolated reports have also questioned whether neurocysticercosis (NCC) causes epilepsy. A large body of evidence is currently available and little – if any – doubt exists on NCC as a cause of unprovoked seizures. NCC is consistently associated with seizures when suitable groups are compared, and in a sizable subset of patients, the semiology of seizures correlates with the anatomical location of parasites. Cyst degeneration and the subsequent inflammatory reaction related to therapy may transiently increase seizure expression, and this can be anticipated and managed with the additional use of corticosteroids. Several controlled trial support the concept that cysticidal drug efficacy, safety, and the impact of cyst destruction in decreasing seizures largely overcome the potential risks of therapy, and have provided evidence of the role of NCC as a cause of r ecurrent unprovoked seizures (epilepsy).

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Estudio Poblacional de Prevalencia de Cisticercosis Porcina en Atahualpa, Ecuador. Metodología y Definiciones Operacionales. Population-Based Study Of Porcine Cysticercosis Prevalence In Atahualpa, Ecuador. Methodology And Operational Definitions.

Objective: To assess sero-prevalence of porcine cysticercosis in Atahualpa, a rural Ecuadorian village endemic for human neurocysticercosis.

Design: We aim to collect at least 600 blood samples of local pigs, to quantify the number of positive bands in the EITB, and to estimate crude prevalence rates of porcine cysticercosis in the village. Sampling will only include pigs older than 2 months of age. Only healthy pigs will be sampled, to avoid risks inherent to manipulation of sick animals. There will be no risk for pigs as the result of the procedure. According to the estimated endemicity of human cysticercosis, we expect to find about 25% of infected pigs in this study. In the event of prevalence rates above or below the expected percentage, we will attempt to assess the causes of such discrepancies. All pig positive to 3 bands of more in the EITB will receive treatment with oxfendazole at a single dose of 30 mg/kg.

Comment: The importance of defining the prevalence of porcine cysticercosis in a village endemic for human neurocysticercosis is to confirm the existence of active transmission. If this is true, treatment of infected pigs will help to interrupt the life cycle of Taenia solium, thus reducing the prevalence of this disease in humans.

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“Brain Holes.” A Diagnostic Challenge In Cysticercosis-Endemic Areas.

The introduction of modern neuroimaging and immunologic techniques has increased the diagnostic accuracy for neurocysticercosis.
However, there are some conditions that mimic neurocysticercosis by the time of the initial evaluation of the patient. We present six patients with a single abnormally dilated perivascular Virchow-Robin space mimicking a cysticercus.
In such cases, administration of repeated trials of cysticidal drugs together with long-term follow-up observation, excluded the diagnosis of neurocysticercosis. Physicians working in cysticercosis-endemic areas must keep in mind the possible occurrence of a single dilated perivascular space, to avoid the practice of unnecessary invasive procedures in patients with “cysticerci-like” lesions that do not change after several courses of cysticidal drug therapy.

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Medical Therapy for Cysticercosis: Indications, Risk, and Benefits

Neurocysticercosis is a pleomorphic disease that causes serveral neurological syndromes and pathological lesions. Therefore, a unique therapeutic shceme can not be useful in every patient. A proper characterizcion of the disease in terms of viability of cysts, degree of the host’s immune response to the parasites, and location of the lesions is of major importance for a rational therapy. Therapy include a combination of symptomatic drugs, cysticidal drugs, surgical resection of lesions, ana placement of ventricular shunts.

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Neurocisticercosis en un Hospital General en San Luis Potosí, México

Cysticercosis is the most common parasitic disease of the CNS and the main cause of secondary epilepsy in developing countries. We present the number of patients with neurocysticercosis evaluated at a general hospital in San Luis Potosí, Mexico, on the basis of the files of the department of neuroimaging. The prevalence of neurocysticercosis that we found in this sample (28% of patients with secondary epilepsy) confirm that this parasitic disease is a common cause of secondary epilepsy and a major public health problem in our city.

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