Cysticercosis overview
Cysticercosis Microchapters |
Diagnosis |
---|
Treatment |
Case Studies |
Cysticercosis overview On the Web |
American Roentgen Ray Society Images of Cysticercosis overview |
Risk calculators and risk factors for Cysticercosis overview |
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]
Overview
Cysticercosis, or neurocysticercosis, is the most common parasitic infestation of the central nervous system worldwide. Humans develop cysticercosis when they ingest eggs or larvae of the tapeworm Taenia solium. The eggs and larvae are usually found in fecally-contaminated water and undercooked pork. When cysticerci are found in the brain, the condition is called neurocysticercosis (NEW-row SIS-tuh-sir-KO-sis).
Humans are the definitive host for T. solium, which means that the adult tapeworms are found only in the intestine of humans. It is possible for a human to be infested by T. solium (taeniasis) without having cysticercosis; in this case the tapeworm lives in the jejunum and regularly lays its eggs. These eggs do not have the capacity to invade tissue, and they are excreted with the rest of that person's feces. In areas of poor sanitation, swine (and humans) ingest the eggs, which may contaminate the water supply.
The eggs are capable of hatching once ingested. The larvae of T. solium are able to invade tissue, and enter the bloodstream. From there, they are able to spread to many organs (skeletal muscle, heart, eye, brain, spinal cord) and form cysts in tissue called cysticerci. They cannot grow into adult worms in this state, and remain indefinitely encapsulated in tissue. Cysticerci are commonly found at autopsy in asymptomatic inhabitants of endemic areas.
Humans may ingest the eggs or larvae directly from contact with fecally contaminated food or water (common). In rural areas where cysticercosis is common, pigs ingest the eggs by the same means. When pigs eat the eggs, the larvae hatch and disseminate and form cysticerci in the striated muscle, which can be the infective source of cysticercosis for humans who later consume that pork. This describes why swine are the intermediate host of T. solium: pigs eat the eggs laid by the tapeworms that live in the gut of infested humans.
Humans with taeniasis contract cysticercosis in the same manner; they are also capable of autoinfection by vomiting. In the latter case, eggs laid by their infesting tapeworm are pushed back into the stomach. When these eggs pass back into intestines, the larvae hatch and the infestation proceeds as usual.