| Literature DB >> 12023918 |
Samuel Ong1, David A Talan, Gregory J Moran, William Mower, Michael Newdow, Victor C W Tsang, Robert W Pinner.
Abstract
Neurocysticercosis appears to be on the rise in the United States, based on immigration patterns and published cases series, including reports of domestic acquisition. We used a collaborative network of U.S. emergency departments to characterize the epidemiology of neurocysticercosis in seizure patients. Data were collected prospectively at 11 university-affiliated, geographically diverse, urban U.S. emergency departments from July 1996 to September 1998. Patients with a seizure who underwent neuroimaging were included. Of the 1,801 patients enrolled in the study, 38 (2.1%) had seizures attributable to neurocysticercosis. The disease was detected in 9 of the 11 sites and was associated with Hispanic ethnicity, immigrant status, and exposure to areas where neurocysticercosis is endemic. This disease appears to be widely distributed and highly prevalent in certain populations (e.g., Hispanic patients) and areas (e.g., Southwest).Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12023918 PMCID: PMC2738481 DOI: 10.3201/eid0806.010377
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Demographic and clinical characteristics of 1,833 neuroimaged emergency department seizure patientsa
| Characteristics | Patients (%) |
|---|---|
| Sex (male) | 1,220 (67) |
| Race/ethnicity | |
| Black | 753 (41) |
| White, non-Hispanic | 643 (35) |
| Hispanic | 320 (17) |
| Native American | 43 (2.3) |
| Asian/Pacific Islander | 33 (1.8) |
| Other or unknown | 41 (2.2) |
| Insurance | |
| Medicare/private | 462 (25.2) |
| Medicaid | 391 (21.3) |
| Uninsured | 762 (41.6) |
| Immigrant statusb | |
| Born in USA | 820 (61) |
| Not born in USA | 178 (13) |
| Unknown | 350 (26) |
| Exposure to disease-endemic region | |
| No travel outside USA | 950 (51.8) |
| Exposure to disease-endemic region | 342 (18.7) |
| Unknown travel history | 541 (29.5) |
| Seizure type | |
| Generalized tonic/clonic | 1,577 (86) |
| Focal motor | 114 (6.2) |
| Partial complex | 86 (4.7) |
| Unknown or undocumented | 56 (3.1) |
| Seizure history | |
| Prior seizure history | 810 (44) |
| No prior seizure history | 896 (49) |
| Unknown seizure history | 127 (7) |
aThe median age (interquartile range) in yrs for these patients was 40 (range 30–51 yrs). b1,348 patients; immigrant status data was not collected on the first 485 patients.
Emergency department physicians’ diagnoses for 1,348a neuroimaged seizure patients
| Diagnosis | Seizure patients (%) |
|---|---|
| Etiology uncertain | 515 (38) |
| Alcohol or drug abuse/withdrawal | 253 (19) |
| Head injury | 105 (7.8) |
| Epilepsy | 92 (6.8) |
| Otherb | 104 (7.7) |
| Brain tumor | 42 (3.1) |
| Metabolic disorder (e.g., hypoglycemia) | 39 (2.9) |
| Stroke | 36 (2.7) |
| Neurocysticercosis | 30 (2.2) |
| Nontraumatic cerebral hemorrhage | 22 (1.6) |
| Syncope, possibly not seizure | 25 (1.9) |
| Meningitis or brain abscess | 18 (1.3) |
| Pseudoseizure | 14 (1.0) |
| Toxoplasmosis | 12 (0.9) |
| No diagnosis documented | 42 (3.1) |
aThe method of categorizing discharge diagnoses was modified during the study. These data represent the last 1,348 of 1,833 patient encounters. bOther category includes six patients with recent neurosurgery, three with toxic levels of anticonvulsant medications, three with reactions to non-anticonvulsant medication, three with systemic lupus erythematosus, and several other less frequently occurring causes.
Neurocysticercosis and selected demographic characteristics of seizure patients, U.S. sites
| Site | Total seizure patients enrolled | Hispanic patients enrolled (%) | Immigrants enrolleda (%) | Neurocysticercosis patients identified (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Albuquerque, NM | 107 | 58 (54) | 9 (8) | 6 (5.6) |
| Atlanta, GA | 146 | 4 (3) | 6 (4) | 0 (0.0) |
| Charlotte, NC | 300 | 11 (4) | 17 (6) | 4 (1.3) |
| Kansas City, MO | 164 | 12 (7) | 3 (2) | 1 (0.6) |
| Los Angeles, CA | 91 | 52 (57) | 21 (23) | 9 (9.9) |
| New Orleans, LA | 174 | 9 (5) | 8 (5) | 2 (1.1) |
| New York, NY | 184 | 50 (27) | 54 (29) | 1 (0.5) |
| Orlando, FL | 68 | 6 (9) | 9 (13) | 0 (0.0) |
| Philadelphia, PA | 185 | 20 (11) | 19 (10) | 1 (0.5) |
| Phoenix, AZ | 243 | 90 (37) | 27 (11) | 10 (4.1) |
| Portland, OR | 171 | 8 (5) | 5 (3) | 4 (2.3) |
|
| 1,833 | 320 (17) | 179 (10) | 38 (2.1) |
| aImmigration data were not obtained from the first 490 patients enrolled. | ||||
Demographic and clinical characteristics of neurocysticercosis patientsa and non-neurocysticercosis patients
| Features | Neurocysticercosis patients n=37 (%) | Non-neurocysticercosis patients n=1,796 (%) | Relative risk 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex, male | 27 (73.0) | 1,189 (66.0) | ||
| Racial/ethnic backgroundb | ||||
| Black | 4 (10.8) | 746 (41.6) | ||
| White, non-Hispanic | 3 (8.1) | 640 (35.7) | ||
| Hispanic | 29 (78.4) | 291 (16.2) | 17.1 (7.9 to 37.1) | |
| Insurance status | ||||
| Medicare/private | 7 (18.9) | 455 (25.3) | ||
| Medicaid | 3 (8.1) | 386 (21.5) | ||
| Uninsured | 22 (59.5) | 738 (41.1) | 2.5 (1.2 to 5.2) | |
| Immigrant statusc | ||||
| Born in US | 5 (21.0) | 815 (62.0) | ||
| Not born in US | 12 (50.0) | 166 (13.0) | 11.1 (3.9 to 31.0) | |
| Unknown | 7 (29.0) | 343 (26.0) | ||
| Exposure to endemic region | ||||
| No travel out of US | 0 (0) | 950 (52.9) | ||
| Exposure to endemic region | 28 (75.7) | 314 (17.5) | 158 (9.7 to 2,581) | |
| Unknown travel history | 9 (24.3) | 532 (29.6) | ||
| Prior history of neurocysticercosisc | ||||
| Positive prior history | 3 (16.0) | 5 (0.5) | 21.6 (7.8 to 59.8) | |
| No prior history | 16 (84.0) | 906 (99.5) | ||
| Seizure type | ||||
| Generalized | 26 (70.3) | 1,551 (86.4) | 0.38 (0.18 to 0.80)d | |
| Tonic/clonic | 4 | |||
| Focal motor | 2 (5.4) | 112 (6.2) | ||
| Partial complex | 7 (18.9) | 79 (4.4) | ||
| Unknown/undocumented | 2 (5.4) | 54 (3.0) | ||
| Seizure history | ||||
| New onset | 19 (51.0) | 877 (49.0) | 1.1 (0.56 to 2.02) | |
| Prior seizure history | 17 (46.0) | 793 (44.0) | ||
| Serologic testing | ||||
| Seropositive | 9 (36.0) | 9 (1.0) | NAe | |
| Seronegative | 16 (64.0) | 856 (99.0) | ||
| Disposition | ||||
| Admission | 16 (43.0) | 865 (48.0) | 1.0 (0.5 to 2.0) | |
| Discharge | 15 (41.0) | 801 (45.0) | ||
aA patient was a person who met the case definition for neurocysticercosis. See text. The median age for neurocysticercosis patients was 32 yrs, with a range of 25–44 yrs; the median age of non-neurocysticercosis patients was 40 yrs (range 30–52 yrs). bn = 36 for this category. cn = 1,343; immigrant status was not collected from the first 490 patients enrolled. dGeneralized seizure versus focal motor or partial complex seizures. eNA, not applicable. Comparison was not done since serology was part of the case definition for neurocysticercosis. CI, confidence intervals.