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Neurology | 2001

Proposed diagnostic criteria for neurocysticercosis.

O. H. Del Brutto; Vedantam Rajshekhar; A. C. White; Victor C. W. Tsang; Theodore E. Nash; Osvaldo Massaiti Takayanagui; Peter M. Schantz; Carlton A. W. Evans; Ana Flisser; Dolores Correa; D. Botero; James C. Allan; Elsa Sarti; Armando E. Gonzalez; Robert H. Gilman; Hector H. Garcia

Neurocysticercosis is the most common helminthic infection of the CNS but its diagnosis remains difficult. Clinical manifestations are nonspecific, most neuroimaging findings are not pathognomonic, and some serologic tests have low sensitivity and specificity. The authors provide diagnostic criteria for neurocysticercosis based on objective clinical, imaging, immunologic, and epidemiologic data. These include four categories of criteria stratified on the basis of their diagnostic strength, including the following: 1) absolute—histologic demonstration of the parasite from biopsy of a brain or spinal cord lesion, cystic lesions showing the scolex on CT or MRI, and direct visualization of subretinal parasites by funduscopic examination; 2) major—lesions highly suggestive of neurocysticercosis on neuroimaging studies, positive serum enzyme-linked immunoelectrotransfer blot for the detection of anticysticercal antibodies, resolution of intracranial cystic lesions after therapy with albendazole or praziquantel, and spontaneous resolution of small single enhancing lesions; 3) minor—lesions compatible with neurocysticercosis on neuroimaging studies, clinical manifestations suggestive of neurocysticercosis, positive CSF enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for detection of anticysticercal antibodies or cysticercal antigens, and cysticercosis outside the CNS; and 4) epidemiologic—evidence of a household contact with Taenia solium infection, individuals coming from or living in an area where cysticercosis is endemic, and history of frequent travel to disease-endemic areas. Interpretation of these criteria permits two degrees of diagnostic certainty: 1) definitive diagnosis, in patients who have one absolute criterion or in those who have two major plus one minor and one epidemiologic criterion; and 2) probable diagnosis, in patients who have one major plus two minor criteria, in those who have one major plus one minor and one epidemiologic criterion, and in those who have three minor plus one epidemiologic criterion.


Analytical Biochemistry | 1983

India ink staining of proteins on nitrocellulose paper

Kathy Hancock; Victor C. W. Tsang

India ink staining of proteins that have been electrotransfer blotted onto nitrocellulose paper is described. This stain proved to be a useful adjunct to the enzyme-linked immunoelectrotransfer blot technique. It is more sensitive than Coomassie blue, amido black, and fast green stains and is simple to use.


Clinical Microbiology Reviews | 2002

Current Consensus Guidelines for Treatment of Neurocysticercosis

Hector H. Garcia; Carlton A. W. Evans; Theodore E. Nash; Osvaldo Massaiti Takayanagui; A. Clinton White; David Botero; Vedantam Rajshekhar; Victor C. W. Tsang; Peter M. Schantz; James C. Allan; Ana Flisser; Dolores Correa; Elsa Sarti; Jon S. Friedland; S. Manuel Martinez; Armando E. Gonzalez; Robert H. Gilman; Oscar H. Del Brutto

SUMMARY Taenia solium neurocysticercosis is a common cause of epileptic seizures and other neurological morbidity in most developing countries. It is also an increasingly common diagnosis in industrialized countries because of immigration from areas where it is endemic. Its clinical manifestations are highly variable and depend on the number, stage, and size of the lesions and the hosts immune response. In part due to this variability, major discrepancies exist in the treatment of neurocysticercosis. A panel of experts in taeniasis/cysticercosis discussed the evidence on treatment of neurocysticercosis for each clinical presentation, and we present the panels consensus and areas of disagreement. Overall, four general recommendations were made: (i) individualize therapeutic decisions, including whether to use antiparasitic drugs, based on the number, location, and viability of the parasites within the nervous system; (ii) actively manage growing cysticerci either with antiparasitic drugs or surgical excision; (iii) prioritize the management of intracranial hypertension secondary to neurocysticercosis before considering any other form of therapy; and (iv) manage seizures as done for seizures due to other causes of secondary seizures (remote symptomatic seizures) because they are due to an organic focus that has been present for a long time.


The Lancet | 1993

Cysticercosis as a major cause of epilepsy in Peru

Hector H. Garcia; Robert H. Gilman; G. Herrera; F. Diaz; Elba Miranda; M. Martínez; M. Alvarado; Victor C. W. Tsang; Joy B. Pilcher

In countries where cysticercosis is endemic, the proportion of epilepsy due to cysticercosis is not well documented. To investigate the association between cysticercosis and epilepsy, we used the enzyme-linked immunoelectrotransfer blot (EITB) assay to detect serum antibodies to Taenia solium in 498 consecutive outpatients at a neurology clinic in Lima, Peru. Every patient was classified as epileptic (n = 189) or non-epileptic (n = 309) after neurological, and where possible electroencephalographic, examination. A substantially higher proportion of epileptic than non-epileptic patients was seropositive in the EITB (22 [12%] vs 8 [3%], p < 0.001). 19% of epileptic patients born outside Lima, 20% of those with late-onset epilepsy, and 29% of patients with both these characteristics were seropositive. Thus, in Peru, cysticercosis is an important aetiological factor for epilepsy.


Neurology | 2004

Calcific neurocysticercosis and epileptogenesis

Theodore E. Nash; O. H. Del Brutto; T. Corona; Antonio V. Delgado-Escueta; Reyna M. Durón; Carlton A. Evans; Robert H. Gilman; Armando E. Gonzalez; Jeffrey A. Loeb; Marco T. Medina; Susan Pietsch-Escueta; Edwin Javier Pretell; Osvaldo Massaiti Takayanagui; William H. Theodore; Victor C. W. Tsang; Hector H. Garcia

Neurocysticercosis is responsible for increased rates of seizures and epilepsy in endemic regions. The most common form of the disease, chronic calcific neurocysticercosis, is the end result of the host’s inflammatory response to the larval cysticercus of Taenia solium. There is increasing evidence indicating that calcific cysticercosis is not clinically inactive but a cause of seizures or focal symptoms in this population. Perilesional edema is at times also present around implicated calcified foci. A better understanding of the natural history, frequency, epidemiology, and pathophysiology of calcific cysticercosis and associated disease manifestations is needed to define its importance, treatment, and prevention.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 1999

Magnitude of the disease burden from neurocysticercosis in a developing country

Caryn Bern; Hector H. Garcia; Carlton A. W. Evans; Armando E. Gonzalez; Manuela Verastegui; Victor C. W. Tsang; Robert H. Gilman

Cysticercosis contributes to higher epilepsy rates in developing countries than in industrialized ones, yet no estimate exists for the associated burden of disease. We used epidemiological data on neurocysticercosis in Peru to calculate the burden of disease and applied our model to the other countries of Latin America where neurocysticercosis is endemic to determine a regional estimate. Analysis of 12 population-based community studies demonstrated that neurocysticercosis was endemic in highland areas and high jungles, with seroprevalences from 6% to 24%. In one community, the adult seizure disorder rate was 9.1% among seropositive persons versus 4. 6% among seronegative persons; we used this difference for estimates. On the basis of average prevalence rates in areas of endemicity of 6%-10%, we estimated that there are 23,512-39,186 symptomatic neurocysticercosis cases in Peru. In Latin America, an estimated 75 million persons live in areas where cysticercosis is endemic, and approximately 400,000 have symptomatic disease. Cysticercosis contributes substantially to neurological disease in Peru and in all of Latin America.


Neurology | 2005

Neurocysticercosis: Association between seizures, serology, and brain CT in rural Peru

S. M. Montano; M. V. Villaran; L. Ylquimiche; Juan J. Figueroa; S. Rodriguez; C. T. Bautista; Armando E. Gonzalez; Victor C. W. Tsang; R.H. Gilman; Hector H. Garcia

Background:Neurocysticercosis (NCC) is the commonest helminthic CNS infection and the main cause of adult-onset seizures in developing countries, also frequent in industrialized countries because of immigration from endemic zones. Although NCC is commonly seen in individuals with seizures in endemic areas, its role as a cause of epilepsy has been questioned on the basis of the poor methodology of published studies. Objective:To determine, in a cysticercosis-endemic area of the northern Peruvian coast, the frequency of 1) epileptic seizures, 2) serum antibodies to Taenia solium, 3) NCC-compatible findings on brain CT, and 4) the associations between these variables. Methods:A community-wide screening survey for possible seizure cases was performed using a validated questionnaire. Positive respondents were later examined in the field by neurologists. Seizure cases were categorized as single seizure, active epilepsy, or inactive epilepsy. Serology was performed for all consenting individuals using immunoblot. Noncontrast brain CT scans were performed in all individuals with seizures and two groups of control subjects without seizures (seropositive and seronegative). Results:The screening survey was applied to 903 permanent residents. Most positive respondents (114/137 [83.2%]) were examined by neurologists. The overall prevalence of epilepsy was 32.1 per 1,000 and that of active epilepsy was 16.6 per 1,000. Seroprevalence was 24.2% (200/825). Seroprevalence was associated with seizures (odds ratio 2.14; p = 0.026). Brain CT abnormalities compatible with NCC were more frequent in individuals with seizures and in those seropositive. Conclusion:In this hyperendemic area, an important proportion of seizure cases are associated with neurocysticercosis as demonstrated by serology or brain CT.


Epilepsia | 2005

Epilepsy and Neurocysticercosis in Atahualpa: A Door-to-Door Survey in Rural Coastal Ecuador

Oscar H. Del Brutto; Rocío Santibáñez; Luis Idrovo; Silvia Rodriguez; Enrique Díaz-Calderón; Carlos Navas; Robert H. Gilman; Fausto Cuesta; Aurelio Mosquera; Armando E. Gonzalez; Victor C. W. Tsang; Hector H. Garcia

Summary:  Purpose: To determine the prevalence of epilepsy and the role of neurocysticercosis in the occurrence of epilepsy in Atahualpa.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 1986

Development and optimization of the FAST-ELISA for detecting antibodies to Schistosoma mansoni

Kathy Hancock; Victor C. W. Tsang

The Falcon assay screening test (F.A.S.T.) system was used to develop a rapid, sensitive, and quantitative kinetic-based enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (k-ELISA) for detecting antibodies against Schistosoma mansoni adult microsomal antigens (MAMAs). The FAST-ELISA uses polystyrene beads on sticks molded to the lid of a microtitration plate. The beads are coated with antigen. Reagents and sera are placed in microtitration plates and the beads exposed to reagents by immersion. The exposure time required for a single dilution of serum or other antibody source, conjugate, and substrate is 5 min each. Excluding preparation time, two plates can easily be assayed in 30 min. The optima for assay conditions, reproducibility, quantitative linearity, and sensitivity are delineated. A battery of sera from patients with both homologous and heterologous infections was tested, and a dilution series of a standard reference serum pool was included with each test. Results were expressed in number of units as calibrated against the standard reference sera pool. Antigen-coated bead storage studies were performed with untreated and three chemically treated antigens. The storage stability of MAMA, ability to perform the assay with minimal equipment, sensitivity, short assay time, and ease of operation make the FAST-ELISA ideal for field studies.


The Lancet | 1996

Schistosomiasis in Lake Malawi

Martin S. Cetron; Lester Chitsulo; James J. Sullivan; Joy B. Pilcher; Marianna Wilson; John Noh; Victor C. W. Tsang; Allen W. Hightower; David G. Addiss

BACKGROUND In 1992 two US Peace Corps volunteers (PCVs) developed central nervous system schistosomiasis due to infection with Schistosoma haematobium following recreational water exposure at Cape Maclear on Lake Malawi, an African lake considered by many to be free of schistosomiasis. To determine the transmission potential and risk for aquiring schistosomiasis in Lake Malawi, a cross-sectional survey of resident expatriates and visitors to Malawi was done during March and April, 1993. METHODS A volunteer cohort of expatriates and visitors representing a cross-section of Malawis foregn population answered detailed questions about freshwater contact and provided blood specimens to determine the seroprevalence of S haematobium and S mansoni by ELISA and immunoblot analyses. A survey for vector snails was conducted along Lake Malawis southwestern shore. FINDINGS The study population of 955 included 305 US citizens and 650 non-US foreign nationals. 303 of the study population had serological evidence of current or past schistosome infection. Seroprevalence was 32% (141/440) among expatriates whose freshwater exposure was limited to Lake Malawi; S haematobium antibodies were found in 135 of 141 (96%) seropositive specimens. Risk of seropositivity increased with the number of freshwater exposures at Lake Malawi resorts. Although many resort areas in the southwestern lake region posed a significant risk, Cape Maclear was the location most strongly associated with seropositivity (OR 2.9, 95% Cl 1.6-5.1). Schistosome-infected Bulinus globosus, the snail vector of S haematobium in Malawi, were found at Cape Maclear and other locations along the lakeshore. INTERPRETATION S haematobium infection is highly prevalent among expatriates and tourists in Malawi. Recreational water contact at popular resorts on Lake Malawi is the most likely source of infection. Transmission of schistosomiasis is occurring in Lake Malawi, a previously under-recognised site of transmission.

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Hector H. Garcia

Cayetano Heredia University

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Armando E. Gonzalez

National University of San Marcos

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Kathy Hancock

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Silvia Rodriguez

Cayetano Heredia University

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Patricia P. Wilkins

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Manuela Verastegui

Cayetano Heredia University

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John Noh

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Cesar M. Gavidia

National University of San Marcos

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Joy B. Pilcher

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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