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Taenia solium

Taenia solium, the pork tapeworm, belongs to the cyclophyllid cestode family Taeniidae. It is found throughout the world and is most common in countries where pork is eaten. It is a tapeworm that uses humans as its definitive host and pigs as the intermediate or secondary hosts. It is transmitted to pigs through human feces that contain the parasite eggs and contaminate their fodder. Pigs ingest the eggs, which develop into larvae, then into oncospheres, and ultimately into infective tapeworm cysts, called cysticercus. Humans acquire the cysts through consumption of uncooked or under-cooked pork and the cysts grow into an adult worms in the small intestine.

Taenia solium
Scolex (head) of Taenia solium
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Platyhelminthes
Class: Cestoda
Order: Cyclophyllidea
Family: Taeniidae
Genus: Taenia
Species:
T. solium
Binomial name
Taenia solium

There are two forms of human infection. One is "primary hosting", called taeniasis, and is due to eating under-cooked pork that contains the cysts and results in adult worms in the intestines. This form generally is without symptoms; the infected person does not know they have tapeworms. This form is easily treated with anthelmintic medications which eliminate the tapeworm. The other form, "secondary hosting", called cysticercosis, is due to eating food, or drinking water, contaminated with faeces from someone infected by the adult worms, thus ingesting the tapeworm eggs, instead of the cysts. The eggs go on to develop cysts primarily in the muscles, and usually with no symptoms. However some people have obvious symptoms, the most harmful and chronic form of which is when the cysts form in the brain. Treatment of this form is more difficult but possible.

The adult worm has a flat, ribbon-like body which is white and measures 2 to 3 metres (6' to 10') long, or more. Its tiny attachment, the scolex, contains suckers and a rostellum as organs of attachment that attach to the wall of the small intestine. The main body, consists of a chain of segments known as proglottids. Each proglottid is a little more than a self-sustainable, very lightly ingestive, self-contained reproductive unit since tapeworms are hermaphrodites.

Human primary hosting is best diagnosed by microscopy of eggs in faeces, often triggered by spotting shed segments. In secondary hosting, imaging techniques such as computed tomography and nuclear magnetic resonance are often employed. Blood samples can also be tested using antibody reaction of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.

T. solium deeply affects developing countries, especially in rural settings where pigs roam free,[1] as clinical manifestations are highly dependent on the number, size, and location of the parasites as well as the host's immune and inflammatory response.[2]

Description edit

Adult T. solium is a triploblastic acoelomate, having no body cavity. It is normally 2 to 3 metres (6' to 10') in length, but can become much larger, sometimes over 8 metres (30') long. It is white in colour and flattened into a ribbon-like body. The anterior end is a knob-like attachment organ (sometimes mistakenly referred to as a "head") called a scolex, 1 mm in diameter. The scolex bears four radially arranged suckers that surround the rostellum. These are the organs of adhesive attachment to the intestinal wall of the host. The rostellum is armed with two rows of proteinaceous[3][4] spiny hooks.[5] Its 22 to 32 rostellar hooks can be differentiated into short (130 µm) and long (180 µm) types.[6][7]

After a short neck is the elongated body, the strobila. The entire body is covered by a covering called a tegument, which is an absorptive layer consisting of a mat of minute specialised microvilli called microtriches. The strobila is divided into segments called proglottids, 800 to 900 in number. Body growth starts from the neck region, so the oldest proglottids are at the posterior end. Thus, the three distinct proglottids are immature proglottids towards the neck, mature proglottids in the middle, and gravid proglottids at the posterior end. A hermaphroditic species, each mature proglottid contains a set of male and female reproductive systems. The numerous testes and a bilobed ovary open into a common genital pore. The oldest gravid proglottids are full of fertilised eggs,[8][9][10][11] Each fertilised egg is spherical and measures 35 to 42 µm in diameter.[7]

If released early enough in the digestive tract and not passed, fertilised eggs can mature using upper tract digestive enzymes and the tiny larvae migrate to form cysticerci in humans. These have three morphologically distinct types.[12] The common one is the ordinary "cellulose" cysticercus, which has a fluid-filled bladder 0.5 to 1.5 cm (¼" to ½") in length and an invaginated scolex. The intermediate form has a scolex. The "racemose" has no evident scolex, but is believed to be larger. They can be 20 cm (8") in length and have 60 ml (2 fl. oz.) of fluid, and 13% of patients with neurocysticercosis can have all three types in the brain.[13][14]

Life cycle edit

 
Lifecycle of T. solium. Red arrows indicate pig; blue arrows human.

The life cycle of T. solium is indirect as it passes through pigs, as intermediate hosts, into humans, as definitive hosts. In humans the infection can be relatively short or long lasting, and in the latter case if reaching the brain can last for life. From humans, the eggs are released in the environment where they await ingestion by another host. In the secondary host, the eggs develop into oncospheres which bore through the intestinal wall and migrate to other parts of the body where the cysticerci form. The cysticerci can survive for several years in the animal.[15]

Definitive host edit

Humans are colonised by the larval stage, the cysticercus, from undercooked pork or other meat. Each microscopic cysticercus is oval in shape, containing an inverted scolex (specifically "protoscolex"), which everts once the organism is inside the small intestine. This process of evagination is stimulated by bile juice and digestive enzymes (of the host). Then, the protoscolex lodges in the host's upper intestine by using its crowned hooks and 4 suckers to enter the intestinal mucosa. Then, the scolex is fixed into the intestine by having the suckers attached to the villi and hooks extended. It grows in size using nutrients from the surroundings. Its strobila lengthens as new proglottids are formed at the foot of the neck. In 10–12 weeks after initial colonisation, it is an adult worm.[16] The exact life span of an adult worm is not determined; however, evidences from an outbreak among British military in the 1930s indicate that they can survive for 2 to 5 years in humans.[17][18]

As a hermaphrodite, it reproduces by self-fertilisation, or cross-fertilisation if gametes are exchanged between two different proglottids. Spermatozoa fuse with the ova in the fertilisation duct, where the zygotes are produced. The zygote undergoes holoblastic and unequal cleavage resulting in three cell types, small, medium and large (micromeres, mesomeres, megameres). Megameres develop into a syncytial layer, the outer embryonic membrane; mesomeres into the radially striated inner embryonic membrane or embryophore; micromeres become the morula. The morula transforms into a six-hooked embryo known as an oncosphere, or hexacanth ("six hooked") larva. A gravid proglottid can contain more than 50,000 embryonated eggs. Gravid proglottids often rupture in the intestine, liberating the oncospheres in faeces. Intact gravid proglottids are shed off in groups of four or five. The free eggs and detached proglottids are spread through the host's defecation (peristalsis). Oncospheres can survive in the environment for up to two months.[9][19]

Intermediate host edit

Pigs are the principal intermediate hosts that ingest the eggs in traces of human faeces, mainly from vegetation contaminated with it such as from water bearing traces of it. The embryonated eggs enter intestine where they hatch into motile oncospheres. The embryonic and basement membranes are removed by the host's digestive enzymes (particularly pepsin). Then the free oncospheres attach on the intestinal wall using their hooks. With the help of digestive enzymes from the penetration glands, they penetrate the intestinal mucosa to enter blood and lymphatic vessels. They move along the general circulatory system to various organs, and large numbers are cleared in the liver. The surviving oncospheres preferentially migrate to striated muscles, as well as the brain, liver, and other tissues, where they settle to form cysts — cysticerci. A single cysticercus is spherical, measuring 1–2 cm (about ½") in diameter, and contains an invaginated protoscolex. The central space is filled with fluid like a bladder, hence it is also called bladder worm. Cysticerci are usually formed within 70 days and may continue to grow for a year.[20]

Humans are also accidental secondary hosts when they are colonised by embryonated eggs, either by auto-colonisation or ingestion of contaminated food. As in pigs, the oncospheres hatch and enter blood circulation. When they settle to form cysts, clinical symptoms of cysticercosis appear. The cysticercus is often called the metacestode.[21]

Diseases edit

Signs and symptoms edit

Taeniasis edit

Taeniasis is infection in the intestines by the adult T. solium. It generally has mild or non-specific symptoms. This may include abdominal pain, nausea, diarrhoea and constipation. Such symptoms will arise when the tapeworm has fully developed in the intestine, this would be around eight weeks after the contraction (ingestion of meat containing cysticerci).[22]

These symptoms could continue until the tapeworm dies from the course of treatment but otherwise could continue for many years, as long as the worm lives. If untreated it is common that the infections with T. solium last for approximately 2–3 years. It is possible that infected people may show no symptoms for years.[22]

Cysticercosis edit

Ingestion of T. solium eggs or egg-containing proglottids which rupture within the host intestines results in the development and subsequent migration of larvae into host tissue to cause cysticercosis. In pigs, there are not normally pathological lesions as they easily develop immunity.[23] But in humans, infection with the eggs causes serious medical conditions. This is because T. solium cysticerci have a predilection for the brain. In symptomatic cases, a wide spectrum of symptoms may be expressed, including headaches, dizziness, and seizures. Brain infection by the cysticerci is called neurocysticercosis and is the leading cause of seizures worldwide.[18][24]

In more severe cases, dementia or hypertension can occur due to perturbation of the normal circulation of cerebrospinal fluid. (Any increase in intracranial pressure will result in a corresponding increase in arterial blood pressure, as the body seeks to maintain circulation to the brain.) The severity of cysticercosis depends on location, size and number of parasite larvae in tissues, as well as the host immune response. Other symptoms include sensory deficits, involuntary movements, and brain system dysfunction. In children, ocular cysts are more common than in other parts of the body.[8]

In many cases, cysticercosis in the brain can lead to epilepsy, seizures, lesions in the brain, blindness, tumour-like growths, and low eosinophil levels. It is the cause of major neurological problems, such as hydrocephalus, paraplegy, meningitis, convulsions, and even death.[25]

Diagnosis edit

Stool tests commonly include microbiology testing – the microscopic examination of stools after concentration aims to determine the amount of eggs. Specificity is extremely high for someone with training but sensitivity is quite low because the high variation in the number of eggs in small amounts of sample.[26]

Stool tapeworm antigen detection: Using ELISA increases the sensitivity of the diagnosis. The downside of this tool is it has high costs, an ELISA reader and reagents are required and trained operators are needed.[26] A studies using Coproantigen (CoAg) ELISA methods are considered very sensitive but currently only genus specific.[27] A 2020 study in Ag-ELISA test on Taenia solium cystercicosis in infected pigs and showed 82.7% sensitivity and 86.3% specificity. The study concluded that the test is more reliable in ruling out T. solium cystercosis versus confirmation.[citation needed]

Stool PCR: This method can provide a species-specific diagnosis when proglottid material is taken from the stool. This method requires specific facilities, equipment and trained individuals to run the tests. This method has not yet been tested in controlled field trials.[26]

Serum antibody tests: using immunoblot and ELISA, tape-worm specific circulating antibodies have been detected. The assays for these tests have both a high sensitivity and specificity.[26] A 2018 study of two commercially available kits showed low sensitivity with patients diagnose with NCC (neurocysticercosis) especially with calcified NCC versus patients with cystic hydatid disease.[28] Current standard for serologic diagnosis of NCC is the lentil lectin-bound glycoproteins/enzyme-linked immunoelectrotransfer blot (LLGP-EITB).[29]

Guidelines for diagnosis and treatment remain difficult for endemic countries, most of them developing with limited resources.[30] Many developing countries diagnosed clinically with imaging.[citation needed]

Prevention edit

The best way to avoid getting tapeworms is to not eat undercooked pork or vegetables contaminated with faeces. Moreover, a high level of sanitation and prevention of faecal contamination of pig feeds also plays a major role in prevention. Infection can be prevented with proper disposal of human faeces around pigs, cooking meat thoroughly or freezing the meat at −10 °C (14°F) for 5 days. For human cysticercosis, dirty hands are attributed to be the primary cause, and especially common among food handlers.[20]

Treatment edit

Treatment of cysticercosis must be carefully monitored for inflammatory reactions to the dying worms, especially if they are located in the brain. Albendazole is commonly given (along with glucocorticoids to reduce the inflammation). In selected cases, surgery may be required to remove the cysts.[31]

In neurocysticercosis, most patients under cysticidal therapy will have significant improvement in seizure control.[32] A combination of praziquantel and albendazole is more effective in treating neurocystercosis.[33] A 2014 double blind randomized control study showed increased parasiticidal effect with albendazole plus praziquantel.[34]

A vaccine to prevent cysticercosis in pigs has been studied. The life-cycle of the parasite can be terminated in their intermediate host, pigs, thereby preventing further human infection. The large scale use of this vaccine, however, is still under consideration.[35][36]

During the 1940s, the preferred treatment was oleoresin of aspidium, which would be introduced into the duodenum via a Rehfuss tube.[37]

Epidemiology edit

T. solium is found worldwide, but its two distinctive forms rely on eating undercooked pork or on ingesting faeces-contaminated water or food (respectively). Because pig meat is the intermediate source of the intestinal parasite, rotation of the full life cycle occurs in regions where humans live in close contact with pigs and eat undercooked pork. However, humans can also act as secondary hosts, which is a more pathological, harmful stage triggered by oral contamination. High prevalences are reported among many places with poorer than average water hygiene or even mildly contaminated water especially with a pork-eating heritage such as Latin America, West Africa, Russia, India, Manchuria, and Southeast Asia.[38] In Europe it is most common in pockets of Slavic countries and among global travelers taking inadequate precautions in eating pork especially.[10][39]

The secondary host form, human cysticercosis, predominates in areas where poor hygiene allows for mild fecal contamination of food, soil, or water supplies. Rates in the United States have shown immigrants from Mexico, Central and South America, and Southeast Asia bear the brunt of cases of cysticercosis caused by the ingestion of microscopic, long-lasting and hardy tapeworm eggs.[40] For example, in 1990 and 1991 four unrelated members of an Orthodox Jewish community in New York City developed recurrent seizures and brain lesions, which were found to have been caused by T. solium. All had housekeepers from Mexico, some of whom were suspected to be the source of the infections.[41][42] Rates of T. solium cysticercosis in West Africa are not affected by any religion.[43]

Neurocystiscercosis is noted at around one-third of all epilepsy cases in many developing countries.[44] Neurological morbidity and mortality remain high in lower-income countries and high amongst developed countries with high rates of migration. Global prevalence rates remain largely unknown as screening tools, immunological, molecular tests, and neuroimaging are not usually available in many endemic areas.[45]

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Taeniasis at Stanford 2013-10-02 at the Wayback Machine
  • Taenia solium at Bioweb
  • Parasites in Humans
  • ZicodeZoo
  • BioLib

taenia, solium, this, article, about, tapeworm, infection, adult, worms, taeniasis, infection, young, form, cysticercosis, pork, tapeworm, belongs, cyclophyllid, cestode, family, taeniidae, found, throughout, world, most, common, countries, where, pork, eaten,. This article is about the tapeworm For the infection by adult worms see taeniasis For the infection by the young form see cysticercosis Taenia solium the pork tapeworm belongs to the cyclophyllid cestode family Taeniidae It is found throughout the world and is most common in countries where pork is eaten It is a tapeworm that uses humans as its definitive host and pigs as the intermediate or secondary hosts It is transmitted to pigs through human feces that contain the parasite eggs and contaminate their fodder Pigs ingest the eggs which develop into larvae then into oncospheres and ultimately into infective tapeworm cysts called cysticercus Humans acquire the cysts through consumption of uncooked or under cooked pork and the cysts grow into an adult worms in the small intestine Taenia soliumScolex head of Taenia soliumScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum PlatyhelminthesClass CestodaOrder CyclophyllideaFamily TaeniidaeGenus TaeniaSpecies T soliumBinomial nameTaenia soliumLinnaeus 1758There are two forms of human infection One is primary hosting called taeniasis and is due to eating under cooked pork that contains the cysts and results in adult worms in the intestines This form generally is without symptoms the infected person does not know they have tapeworms This form is easily treated with anthelmintic medications which eliminate the tapeworm The other form secondary hosting called cysticercosis is due to eating food or drinking water contaminated with faeces from someone infected by the adult worms thus ingesting the tapeworm eggs instead of the cysts The eggs go on to develop cysts primarily in the muscles and usually with no symptoms However some people have obvious symptoms the most harmful and chronic form of which is when the cysts form in the brain Treatment of this form is more difficult but possible The adult worm has a flat ribbon like body which is white and measures 2 to 3 metres 6 to 10 long or more Its tiny attachment the scolex contains suckers and a rostellum as organs of attachment that attach to the wall of the small intestine The main body consists of a chain of segments known as proglottids Each proglottid is a little more than a self sustainable very lightly ingestive self contained reproductive unit since tapeworms are hermaphrodites Human primary hosting is best diagnosed by microscopy of eggs in faeces often triggered by spotting shed segments In secondary hosting imaging techniques such as computed tomography and nuclear magnetic resonance are often employed Blood samples can also be tested using antibody reaction of enzyme linked immunosorbent assay T solium deeply affects developing countries especially in rural settings where pigs roam free 1 as clinical manifestations are highly dependent on the number size and location of the parasites as well as the host s immune and inflammatory response 2 Contents 1 Description 2 Life cycle 2 1 Definitive host 2 2 Intermediate host 3 Diseases 3 1 Signs and symptoms 3 1 1 Taeniasis 3 1 2 Cysticercosis 3 2 Diagnosis 3 3 Prevention 3 4 Treatment 3 5 Epidemiology 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksDescription editAdult T soliumis a triploblastic acoelomate having no body cavity It is normally 2 to 3 metres 6 to 10 in length but can become much larger sometimes over 8 metres 30 long It is white in colour and flattened into a ribbon like body The anterior end is a knob like attachment organ sometimes mistakenly referred to as a head called a scolex 1 mm in diameter The scolex bears four radially arranged suckers that surround the rostellum These are the organs of adhesive attachment to the intestinal wall of the host The rostellum is armed with two rows of proteinaceous 3 4 spiny hooks 5 Its 22 to 32 rostellar hooks can be differentiated into short 130 µm and long 180 µm types 6 7 After a short neck is the elongated body the strobila The entire body is covered by a covering called a tegument which is an absorptive layer consisting of a mat of minute specialised microvilli called microtriches The strobila is divided into segments called proglottids 800 to 900 in number Body growth starts from the neck region so the oldest proglottids are at the posterior end Thus the three distinct proglottids are immature proglottids towards the neck mature proglottids in the middle and gravid proglottids at the posterior end A hermaphroditic species each mature proglottid contains a set of male and female reproductive systems The numerous testes and a bilobed ovary open into a common genital pore The oldest gravid proglottids are full of fertilised eggs 8 9 10 11 Each fertilised egg is spherical and measures 35 to 42 µm in diameter 7 If released early enough in the digestive tract and not passed fertilised eggs can mature using upper tract digestive enzymes and the tiny larvae migrate to form cysticerci in humans These have three morphologically distinct types 12 The common one is the ordinary cellulose cysticercus which has a fluid filled bladder 0 5 to 1 5 cm to in length and an invaginated scolex The intermediate form has a scolex The racemose has no evident scolex but is believed to be larger They can be 20 cm 8 in length and have 60 ml 2 fl oz of fluid and 13 of patients with neurocysticercosis can have all three types in the brain 13 14 nbsp Taenia solium adult nbsp Taenia solium scolex x400 nbsp Egg of T soliumLife cycle edit nbsp Lifecycle of T solium Red arrows indicate pig blue arrows human The life cycle of T solium is indirect as it passes through pigs as intermediate hosts into humans as definitive hosts In humans the infection can be relatively short or long lasting and in the latter case if reaching the brain can last for life From humans the eggs are released in the environment where they await ingestion by another host In the secondary host the eggs develop into oncospheres which bore through the intestinal wall and migrate to other parts of the body where the cysticerci form The cysticerci can survive for several years in the animal 15 Definitive host edit Humans are colonised by the larval stage the cysticercus from undercooked pork or other meat Each microscopic cysticercus is oval in shape containing an inverted scolex specifically protoscolex which everts once the organism is inside the small intestine This process of evagination is stimulated by bile juice and digestive enzymes of the host Then the protoscolex lodges in the host s upper intestine by using its crowned hooks and 4 suckers to enter the intestinal mucosa Then the scolex is fixed into the intestine by having the suckers attached to the villi and hooks extended It grows in size using nutrients from the surroundings Its strobila lengthens as new proglottids are formed at the foot of the neck In 10 12 weeks after initial colonisation it is an adult worm 16 The exact life span of an adult worm is not determined however evidences from an outbreak among British military in the 1930s indicate that they can survive for 2 to 5 years in humans 17 18 As a hermaphrodite it reproduces by self fertilisation or cross fertilisation if gametes are exchanged between two different proglottids Spermatozoa fuse with the ova in the fertilisation duct where the zygotes are produced The zygote undergoes holoblastic and unequal cleavage resulting in three cell types small medium and large micromeres mesomeres megameres Megameres develop into a syncytial layer the outer embryonic membrane mesomeres into the radially striated inner embryonic membrane or embryophore micromeres become the morula The morula transforms into a six hooked embryo known as an oncosphere or hexacanth six hooked larva A gravid proglottid can contain more than 50 000 embryonated eggs Gravid proglottids often rupture in the intestine liberating the oncospheres in faeces Intact gravid proglottids are shed off in groups of four or five The free eggs and detached proglottids are spread through the host s defecation peristalsis Oncospheres can survive in the environment for up to two months 9 19 Intermediate host edit Pigs are the principal intermediate hosts that ingest the eggs in traces of human faeces mainly from vegetation contaminated with it such as from water bearing traces of it The embryonated eggs enter intestine where they hatch into motile oncospheres The embryonic and basement membranes are removed by the host s digestive enzymes particularly pepsin Then the free oncospheres attach on the intestinal wall using their hooks With the help of digestive enzymes from the penetration glands they penetrate the intestinal mucosa to enter blood and lymphatic vessels They move along the general circulatory system to various organs and large numbers are cleared in the liver The surviving oncospheres preferentially migrate to striated muscles as well as the brain liver and other tissues where they settle to form cysts cysticerci A single cysticercus is spherical measuring 1 2 cm about in diameter and contains an invaginated protoscolex The central space is filled with fluid like a bladder hence it is also called bladder worm Cysticerci are usually formed within 70 days and may continue to grow for a year 20 Humans are also accidental secondary hosts when they are colonised by embryonated eggs either by auto colonisation or ingestion of contaminated food As in pigs the oncospheres hatch and enter blood circulation When they settle to form cysts clinical symptoms of cysticercosis appear The cysticercus is often called the metacestode 21 Diseases editMain articles Cysticercosis and Taeniasis Signs and symptoms edit Taeniasis edit Taeniasis is infection in the intestines by the adult T solium It generally has mild or non specific symptoms This may include abdominal pain nausea diarrhoea and constipation Such symptoms will arise when the tapeworm has fully developed in the intestine this would be around eight weeks after the contraction ingestion of meat containing cysticerci 22 These symptoms could continue until the tapeworm dies from the course of treatment but otherwise could continue for many years as long as the worm lives If untreated it is common that the infections with T solium last for approximately 2 3 years It is possible that infected people may show no symptoms for years 22 Cysticercosis edit Ingestion of T solium eggs or egg containing proglottids which rupture within the host intestines results in the development and subsequent migration of larvae into host tissue to cause cysticercosis In pigs there are not normally pathological lesions as they easily develop immunity 23 But in humans infection with the eggs causes serious medical conditions This is because T solium cysticerci have a predilection for the brain In symptomatic cases a wide spectrum of symptoms may be expressed including headaches dizziness and seizures Brain infection by the cysticerci is called neurocysticercosis and is the leading cause of seizures worldwide 18 24 In more severe cases dementia or hypertension can occur due to perturbation of the normal circulation of cerebrospinal fluid Any increase in intracranial pressure will result in a corresponding increase in arterial blood pressure as the body seeks to maintain circulation to the brain The severity of cysticercosis depends on location size and number of parasite larvae in tissues as well as the host immune response Other symptoms include sensory deficits involuntary movements and brain system dysfunction In children ocular cysts are more common than in other parts of the body 8 In many cases cysticercosis in the brain can lead to epilepsy seizures lesions in the brain blindness tumour like growths and low eosinophil levels It is the cause of major neurological problems such as hydrocephalus paraplegy meningitis convulsions and even death 25 Diagnosis edit Stool tests commonly include microbiology testing the microscopic examination of stools after concentration aims to determine the amount of eggs Specificity is extremely high for someone with training but sensitivity is quite low because the high variation in the number of eggs in small amounts of sample 26 Stool tapeworm antigen detection Using ELISA increases the sensitivity of the diagnosis The downside of this tool is it has high costs an ELISA reader and reagents are required and trained operators are needed 26 A studies using Coproantigen CoAg ELISA methods are considered very sensitive but currently only genus specific 27 A 2020 study in Ag ELISA test on Taenia solium cystercicosis in infected pigs and showed 82 7 sensitivity and 86 3 specificity The study concluded that the test is more reliable in ruling out T solium cystercosis versus confirmation citation needed Stool PCR This method can provide a species specific diagnosis when proglottid material is taken from the stool This method requires specific facilities equipment and trained individuals to run the tests This method has not yet been tested in controlled field trials 26 Serum antibody tests using immunoblot and ELISA tape worm specific circulating antibodies have been detected The assays for these tests have both a high sensitivity and specificity 26 A 2018 study of two commercially available kits showed low sensitivity with patients diagnose with NCC neurocysticercosis especially with calcified NCC versus patients with cystic hydatid disease 28 Current standard for serologic diagnosis of NCC is the lentil lectin bound glycoproteins enzyme linked immunoelectrotransfer blot LLGP EITB 29 Guidelines for diagnosis and treatment remain difficult for endemic countries most of them developing with limited resources 30 Many developing countries diagnosed clinically with imaging citation needed Prevention edit The best way to avoid getting tapeworms is to not eat undercooked pork or vegetables contaminated with faeces Moreover a high level of sanitation and prevention of faecal contamination of pig feeds also plays a major role in prevention Infection can be prevented with proper disposal of human faeces around pigs cooking meat thoroughly or freezing the meat at 10 C 14 F for 5 days For human cysticercosis dirty hands are attributed to be the primary cause and especially common among food handlers 20 Treatment edit Treatment of cysticercosis must be carefully monitored for inflammatory reactions to the dying worms especially if they are located in the brain Albendazole is commonly given along with glucocorticoids to reduce the inflammation In selected cases surgery may be required to remove the cysts 31 In neurocysticercosis most patients under cysticidal therapy will have significant improvement in seizure control 32 A combination of praziquantel and albendazole is more effective in treating neurocystercosis 33 A 2014 double blind randomized control study showed increased parasiticidal effect with albendazole plus praziquantel 34 A vaccine to prevent cysticercosis in pigs has been studied The life cycle of the parasite can be terminated in their intermediate host pigs thereby preventing further human infection The large scale use of this vaccine however is still under consideration 35 36 During the 1940s the preferred treatment was oleoresin of aspidium which would be introduced into the duodenum via a Rehfuss tube 37 Epidemiology edit T solium is found worldwide but its two distinctive forms rely on eating undercooked pork or on ingesting faeces contaminated water or food respectively Because pig meat is the intermediate source of the intestinal parasite rotation of the full life cycle occurs in regions where humans live in close contact with pigs and eat undercooked pork However humans can also act as secondary hosts which is a more pathological harmful stage triggered by oral contamination High prevalences are reported among many places with poorer than average water hygiene or even mildly contaminated water especially with a pork eating heritage such as Latin America West Africa Russia India Manchuria and Southeast Asia 38 In Europe it is most common in pockets of Slavic countries and among global travelers taking inadequate precautions in eating pork especially 10 39 The secondary host form human cysticercosis predominates in areas where poor hygiene allows for mild fecal contamination of food soil or water supplies Rates in the United States have shown immigrants from Mexico Central and South America and Southeast Asia bear the brunt of cases of cysticercosis caused by the ingestion of microscopic long lasting and hardy tapeworm eggs 40 For example in 1990 and 1991 four unrelated members of an Orthodox Jewish community in New York City developed recurrent seizures and brain lesions which were found to have been caused by T solium All had housekeepers from Mexico some of whom were suspected to be the source of the infections 41 42 Rates of T solium cysticercosis in West Africa are not affected by any religion 43 Neurocystiscercosis is noted at around one third of all epilepsy cases in many developing countries 44 Neurological morbidity and mortality remain high in lower income countries and high amongst developed countries with high rates of migration Global prevalence rates remain largely unknown as screening tools immunological molecular tests and neuroimaging are not usually available in many endemic areas 45 See also editList of parasitesReferences edit Garcia HH Rodriguez S Friedland JS Cysticercosis Working Group in Peru Immunology of Taenia solium taeniasis and human cysticercosis Parasite Immunol 2014 Aug 36 8 388 96 doi 10 1111 pim 12126 PMID 24962350 PMCID PMC5761726 Gonzales I Rivera JT Garcia HH Cysticercosis Working Group in Peru Pathogenesis of Taenia solium taeniasis and cysticercosis Parasite Immunol 2016 Mar 38 3 136 46 doi 10 1111 pim 12307 PMID 26824681 Crusz Hilary 1947 The early development of the rostellum of Cysticercus fasciolaris Rud and the chemical nature of its hooks The Journal of Parasitology 33 2 87 98 doi 10 2307 3273530 JSTOR 3273530 PMID 20294080 Mount P M 1970 Histogenesis of the rostellar hooks of Taenia crassiceps Zeder 1800 Cestoda The Journal of Parasitology 56 5 947 961 doi 10 2307 3277513 JSTOR 3277513 PMID 5504533 Sjaastad Oyestein V Hove Knut Sand Olav 2010 Physiology of Domestic Animals 2 ed Oslo Scandinavian Veterinary Press ISBN 9788291743073 Flisser Ana Viniegra Ana Elena Aguilar Vega Laura Garza Rodriguez Adriana Maravilla Pablo Avila Guillermina 2004 Portrait of Human Tapeworms The Journal of Parasitology 90 4 914 916 doi 10 1645 GE 3354CC JSTOR 3286360 PMID 15357104 S2CID 35124422 a b Cheng Thomas C 1986 General Parasitology 2 ed Oxford Elsevier Science pp 413 414 ISBN 978 0 323 14010 2 OCLC 843201842 a b Pawlowski Z S Prabhakar Sudesh 2002 Taenia solium basic biology and transmission In Gagandeep Singh Sudesh Prabhakar ed Taenia solium Cysticercosis from Basic to Clinical Science Wallingford Oxon UK CABI Pub pp 1 14 ISBN 9780851998398 a b Carter Burton J Bogitsh Clint E 2013 Human Parasitology 4th ed Amsterdam Academic Press pp 241 244 ISBN 9780124159150 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Gutierrez Yezid 2000 Diagnostic Pathology of Parasitic Infections with Clinical Correlations 2nd ed New York u a Oxford University Press pp 635 652 ISBN 9780195121438 Willms Kaethe 2008 Morphology and Biochemistry of the Pork Tapeworm Taenia solium Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry 8 5 375 382 doi 10 2174 156802608783790875 PMID 18393900 Rabiela MT Rivas A Flisser A November 1989 Morphological types of Taenia solium cysticerci Parasitology Today 5 11 357 359 doi 10 1016 0169 4758 89 90111 7 PMID 15463154 Modi Manish Lal Vivek Prabhakar Sudesh Bhardwaj Amit Sehgal Rakesh Sharma Sudhir 2013 Reversible dementia as a presenting manifestation of racemose neurocysticercosis Annals of Indian Academy of Neurology 16 1 88 90 doi 10 4103 0972 2327 107706 PMC 3644790 PMID 23661971 McClugage SamuelG Lee RachaelA Camins BernardC Mercado Acosta JuanJ Rodriguez Martin Riley KristenO 2017 Treatment of racemose neurocysticercosis Surgical Neurology International 8 1 168 doi 10 4103 sni sni 157 17 PMC 5551286 PMID 28840072 Biology 2013 January 10 Retrieved from https www cdc gov parasites taeniasis biology html Mehlhorn Heinz 2016 Taenia solium in Mehlhorn Heinz ed Encyclopedia of Parasitology Springer Berlin Heidelberg pp 2614 2621 doi 10 1007 978 3 662 43978 4 3093 ISBN 978 3 662 43977 7 Dixon H B F Hargreaves W H 1944 Cysticercosis Taenia solium a further ten years clinical study covering 284 cases QJM An International Journal of Medicine 13 4 107 122 doi 10 1093 oxfordjournals qjmed a066444 a b Garcia H H Rodriguez S Friedland J S for The Cysticercosis Working Group in Peru 2014 Immunology of Taenia solium taeniasis and human cysticercosis Parasite Immunology 36 8 388 396 doi 10 1111 pim 12126 PMC 5761726 PMID 24962350 Mayta Holger 2009 Cloning and Characterization of Two Novel Taenia Solium Antigenic Proteins and Applicability to the Diagnosis and Control of Taeniasis cysticercosis pp 4 12 ISBN 9780549938996 a b Garcia Oscar H Del Brutto Hector H 2014 Taenia solium Biological Characteristics and Life Cycle Cysticercosis of the Human Nervous System 1 2014 ed Berlin Springer Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH amp Co KG pp 11 21 ISBN 978 3 642 39021 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Coral Almeida Marco Gabriel Sarah Abatih Emmanuel Nji Praet Nicolas Benitez Washington Dorny Pierre 2015 Torgerson Paul Robert ed Taenia solium Human Cysticercosis A Systematic Review of Sero epidemiological Data from Endemic Zones around the World PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases 9 7 e0003919 doi 10 1371 journal pntd 0003919 PMC 4493064 PMID 26147942 a b Taeniasis Cysticercosis www who int Retrieved 2019 04 02 de Aluja A S Villalobos A N M Plancarte A Rodarte L F Hernandez M Zamora C Sciutto E 1999 Taenia solium cysticercosis immunity in pigs induced by primary infection Veterinary Parasitology 81 2 129 135 doi 10 1016 S0304 4017 98 00234 9 PMID 10030755 DeGiorgio Christopher M Medina Marco T Duron Reyna Zee Chi Escueta Susan Pietsch 2004 Neurocysticercosis Epilepsy Currents 4 3 107 111 doi 10 1111 j 1535 7597 2004 43008 x PMC 1176337 PMID 16059465 Flisser A Avila G Maravilla P Mendlovic F Leon Cabrera S Cruz Rivera M Garza A Gomez B Aguilar L Teran N Velasco S Benitez M Jimenez Gonzalez DE 2010 Taenia solium current understanding of laboratory animal models of taeniosis Parasitology 137 3 347 57 doi 10 1017 S0031182010000272 PMID 20188011 S2CID 25698465 a b c d Gilman Robert H Gonzalez Armando E Llanos Zavalaga Fernando Tsang Victor C W Garcia Hector H September 2012 Prevention and control of Taenia solium taeniasis cysticercosis in Peru Pathogens and Global Health 106 5 312 318 doi 10 1179 2047773212Y 0000000045 ISSN 2047 7724 PMC 4005116 PMID 23265557 Guezala MC Rodriguez S Zamora H Garcia HH Gonzalez AE Tembo A Allan JC Craig PS Development of a species specific coproantigen ELISA for human Taenia solium taeniasis Am J Trop Med Hyg 2009 Sep 81 3 433 7 PMID 19706909 Garcia HH Castillo Y Gonzales I Bustos JA Saavedra H Jacob L Del Brutto OH Wilkins PP Gonzalez AE Gilman RH Cysticercosis Working Group in Peru Low sensitivity and frequent cross reactions in commercially available antibody detection ELISA assays for Taenia solium cysticercosis Trop Med Int Health 2018 Jan 23 1 101 105 doi 10 1111 tmi 13010 Epub 2017 Dec 7 PMID 29160912 PMCID PMC5760338 Hernandez Gonzalez A Noh J Perteguer MJ Garate T Handali S Comparison of T24H his GST T24H and GST Ts8B2 recombinant antigens in western blot ELISA and multiplex bead based assay for diagnosis of neurocysticercosis Parasit Vectors 2017 May 15 10 1 237 doi 10 1186 s13071 017 2160 2 PMID 28506245 PMCID PMC5433036 Carpio A Fleury A Kelvin EA Romo ML Abraham R Tellez Zenteno J New guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of neurocysticercosis a difficult proposal for patients in endemic countries Expert Rev Neurother 2018 Oct 18 10 743 747 doi 10 1080 14737175 2018 1518133 Epub 2018 Sep 6 PMID 30185077 Nash Theodore E Mahanty Siddhartha Garcia Hector H 2011 Corticosteroid use in neurocysticercosis Expert Review of Neurotherapeutics 11 8 1175 1183 doi 10 1586 ern 11 86 PMC 3721198 PMID 21797658 Santos IC Kobayashi E Cardoso TM Guerreiro CA Cendes F Cysticidal therapy impact on seizure control in epilepsy associated with neurocysticercosis Arq Neuropsiquiatr 2000 Dec 58 4 1014 20 doi 10 1590 s0004 282x2000000600006 PMID 11105066 Garcia HH Lescano AG Gonzales I Bustos JA Pretell EJ Horton J Saavedra H Gonzalez AE Gilman RH Cysticercosis Working Group in Peru Cysticidal Efficacy of Combined Treatment With Praziquantel and Albendazole for Parenchymal Brain Cysticercosis Clin Infect Dis 2016 Jun 1 62 11 1375 9 doi 10 1093 cid ciw134 Epub 2016 Mar 16 PMID 26984901 PMCID PMC4872290 Garcia HH Gonzales I Lescano AG Bustos JA Zimic M Escalante D Saavedra H Gavidia M Rodriguez L Najar E Umeres H Pretell EJ Cysticercosis Working Group in Peru Efficacy of combined antiparasitic therapy with praziquantel and albendazole for neurocysticercosis a double blind randomised controlled trial Lancet Infect Dis 2014 Aug 14 8 687 695 doi 10 1016 S1473 3099 14 70779 0 Epub 2014 Jul 3 PMID 24999157 PMCID PMC4157934 Lightowlers Marshall W Donadeu Meritxell Gauci Charles G Colston Angela Kushwaha Peetambar Singh Dinesh Kumar Subedi Suyog Sah Keshav Poudel Ishab 25 February 2019 Implementation of a practical and effective pilot intervention against transmission of Taenia solium by pigs in the Banke district of Nepal PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases 13 2 e0006838 doi 10 1371 journal pntd 0006838 PMC 6405169 PMID 30802248 Garcia HH Lescano AG Lanchote VL Pretell EJ Gonzales I Bustos JA Takayanagui OM Bonato PS Horton J Saavedra H Gonzalez AE Gilman RH Cysticercosis Working Group in Peru Pharmacokinetics of combined treatment with praziquantel and albendazole in neurocysticercosis Br J Clin Pharmacol 2011 Jul 72 1 77 84 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2125 2011 03945 x PMID 21332573 PMCID PMC3141188 Clinical Aspects and Treatment of the More Common Intestinal Parasites of Man TB 33 Veterans Administration Technical Bulletin 1946 amp 1947 10 1 14 1948 Reeder P E S Palmer M M 2001 Imaging of Tropical Diseases With Epidemiological Pathological and Clinical Correlation 2 revised ed Heidelberg Germany Springer Verlag pp 641 642 ISBN 978 3 540 56028 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Hansen NJ Hagelskjaer LH Christensen T 1992 Neurocysticercosis a short review and presentation of a Scandinavian case Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases 24 3 255 62 doi 10 3109 00365549209061330 PMID 1509231 Flisser A May 1988 Neurocysticercosis in Mexico Parasitology Today 4 5 131 137 doi 10 1016 0169 4758 88 90187 1 PMID 15463066 Dworkin Mark S 2010 Outbreak Investigations Around the World Case Studies in Infectious Disease Jones and Bartlett Publishers pp 192 196 ISBN 978 0 7637 5143 2 Retrieved August 9 2011 Schantz Moore Anne C et al September 3 1992 Neurocysticercosis in an Orthodox Jewish Community in New York City New England Journal of Medicine 327 10 692 695 doi 10 1056 NEJM199209033271004 PMID 1495521 Melki Jihen Koffi Eugene Boka Marcel Toure Andre Soumahoro Man Koumba Jambou Ronan 2018 Taenia solium cysticercosis in West Africa status update Parasite 25 49 doi 10 1051 parasite 2018048 ISSN 1776 1042 PMC 6144651 PMID 30230445 nbsp Garcia HH O Neal SE Noh J Handali S Cysticercosis Working Group in Peru Laboratory Diagnosis of Neurocysticercosis Taenia solium J Clin Microbiol 2018 Aug 27 56 9 e00424 18 doi 10 1128 JCM 00424 18 PMID 29875195 PMCID PMC6113464 Carpio A Fleury A Romo ML Abraham R Neurocysticercosis the good the bad and the missing Expert Rev Neurother 2018 Apr 18 4 289 301 doi 10 1080 14737175 2018 1451328 Epub 2018 Mar 14 PMID 29521117 External links editTaenia solium Genome Project UNAM Taeniasis image library at DPD Cysticercosis image library at DPD Taeniasis at Stanford Archived 2013 10 02 at the Wayback Machine Taenia solium at Bioweb Parasites in Humans ZicodeZoo BioLib Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Taenia solium amp oldid 1184057600, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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