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IMAGES IN NEUROLOGY |
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Year : 2011 | Volume
: 14
| Issue : 1 | Page : 56-57 |
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A case of disseminated neurocysticercosis
D Saranya, M Jawahar, K Bhanu
Department of Neurology, Institute of Neurology, Madras Medical College and Government General Hospital, Chennai - 600 003, India
Date of Submission | 28-Jan-2010 |
Date of Decision | 19-Feb-2010 |
Date of Acceptance | 27-Jul-2010 |
Date of Web Publication | 15-Mar-2011 |
Correspondence Address: K Bhanu 7/1, First Cross Street, Vengeeswarar Nagar, Vadapalani, Chennai - 600 026 India
 Source of Support: None, Conflict of Interest: None  | Check |
DOI: 10.4103/0972-2327.78054
How to cite this article: Saranya D, Jawahar M, Bhanu K. A case of disseminated neurocysticercosis. Ann Indian Acad Neurol 2011;14:56-7 |
Introduction | |  |
Neurocysticercosis is the most common parasitic infection of the central nervous system. However, disseminated cysticercosis is rare. [1] We present a case of disseminated neurocysticercosis with characteristic imaging findings. A 60-year-old male presented with a history of complex partial seizures and frontal headache for two months. There was no history of limb weakness, diplopia, sensory deficits, bladder or bowel disturbances. There was no history of fever or trauma. General examination revealed multiple pea-sized nodules. The central nervous system examination and fundus examination were normal. The patient did not give consent for biopsy of the subcutaneous nodules.
A computed tomography (CT) scan of the brain showed multiple calcified lesions located bilaterally in the supratentorium and in the infratentorium. A calcified lesion was also seen in the soft tissue of the scalp. The magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain showed hypodense lesions surrounded by peri-lesional edema in the frontal and parietal lobes[Figure 1]. The plain radiograph of the calf showed multiple cigar-shaped calcified lesions arranged parallel to the muscle fibres in the intramuscular plane and in the subcutaneous plane. The chest radiograph also revealed multiple cigar-shaped calcifications in the subcutaneous plane [Figure 2]. These characteristic imaging findings in a patient from an endemic area and a compatible clinical picture points to the diagnosis of systemic disseminated cysticercosis. [2] | Figure 1: (a) Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain showing a hypodense lesion surrounded by perilesional edema in the right parietal lobe and edema in the left parietal lobe, (b) The computerised tomography scan of the brain showing a calcified lesion in the soft tissue of the scalp and (c) multiple calcified lesions located bilaterally in the brain parenchyma
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 | Figure 2: The chest radiograph showing multiple cigar-shaped calcifications in the subcutaneous plane (left arrows). The radiograph of the calf showing multiple cigar-shaped calcified lesions arranged in the subcutaneous plane and parallel to the muscle fibres in the intramuscular plane (centre and right arrows).
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The CT picture in neurocysticercosis depends on the number, location, and stage of the lesions. [3] In the vesicular stage (viable cysts), the cysts characteristically appear circumscribed and hypodense and do not enhance after contrast administration. Most of these lesions have in their interior an eccentric hyperdense nodule representing the scolex. On an MRI scan, vesicular cysts appear with signal properties similar to those of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in both T1- and T2-weighted images. The scolex is usually visualized within the cyst as a high-intensity nodule. In the colloidal stage, which represents a dying cyst, there is a ring-enhancing lesion surrounded by white matter edema. On an MRI scan, the wall of the cyst becomes thick and hypointense and there is marked perilesional edema. In the next nodular granular stage, the lesions are homogenously enhancing and they ultimately calcify. The calcified stage, representing a dead parasite, appears as a hyperdense lesion on noncontrast CT scans. The CT picture of our patient depicts the calcified stage of the cysticercal larvae. These lesions are usually not visualized with MRI. Although these calcified nodules are usually without perilesional edema, recent studies have shown that perilesional edema is common and associated with seizures in patients with calcified neurocysticercosis. [4],[5] Plain radiographs of the soft tissue involved typically show multiple cigar-shaped calcified lesions arranged parallel to the muscle fibres in the intramuscular plane and in the subcutaneous plane.
References | |  |
1. | Basu G, Surekha V, Ganesh A. Disseminated cysticercosis. Trop Doct 2009;39:48-9.  |
2. | Prasad KN, Prasad A, Verma A, Singh AK. Human cysticercosis and Indian scenario: A review. J Biosci 2008;33:571-82.  |
3. | García HH, Del Brutto OH. Imaging findings in neurocysticercosis. Acta Trop 2003;87:71-8.  |
4. | Evans CA, Gilman RH, Gonzalez AE, Loeb JA, Medina MT, Pietsch-Escueta S, et al. Calcific neurocysticercosis and epileptogenesis. Neurology 2004;62:1934-8.  |
5. | Nash TE, Patronas NJ. Edema associated with calcified lesions in neurocysticercosis. Neurology 1999;53:777-81.  |
[Figure 1], [Figure 2]
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