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A Nine-Year Longitudinal Case Study Of A 27-Year-Old Male With Neurocysticercosis Presenting With New Onset Seizures, Ciara Doyle, Veronica Thompson, Amanda Ho, Joy Zarandy
A Nine-Year Longitudinal Case Study Of A 27-Year-Old Male With Neurocysticercosis Presenting With New Onset Seizures, Ciara Doyle, Veronica Thompson, Amanda Ho, Joy Zarandy
Research Day
Background:
Taenia solium is a cestode endemic to regions of Latin America, Asia, sub-Saharan Africa and Oceania, and serves as the most common cause of acquired epilepsy in the world. T. solium eggs are transmitted fecal-orally when a human or pig host ingests contaminated food or water. Larvae hatch from the intestines and invade into muscle, tissue, or organs, forming cysts called cysticerci. Cysticerci involving the central nervous system is termed neurocysticercosis (NCC). Patients with NCC typically remain asymptomatic for 3-5 years in the viable stage until the host’s immune response is activated in the degenerating stage. Immune-mediated degradation of …