| Literature DB >> 21629722 |
Hélène Carabin1, Patrick Cyaga Ndimubanzi, Christine M Budke, Hai Nguyen, Yingjun Qian, Linda Demetry Cowan, Julie Ann Stoner, Elizabeth Rainwater, Mary Dickey.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The clinical manifestations of neurocysticercosis (NCC) are poorly understood. This systematic review aims to estimate the frequencies of different manifestations, complications and disabilities associated with NCC.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21629722 PMCID: PMC3101170 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0001152
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Figure 1Flowchart describing the number of papers remaining at different phases of the study.
Descriptive summary of the studies included for estimating the distribution of manifestations associated with neurocysticercosis.
| Reference (language) | Country, year(s) of study | Population | Diagnosis of NCC | Type of lesions | Measurement of manifestations | ||
| Source | Target | Study sample size | |||||
|
| Brazil, 1987–97 | Autopsies of the Serviço de Anatomia Patológica do Hospital de Clínicas da Universidade Federal do Paraná, 1987–97 | 28 autopsies (>15 years old) | 27 (>18–85 years old) | Autopsies | 100% active | Medical chart and necropsy report |
|
| Brazil, 1995–6 | Catchment population of the Centro de Diagnostico por Imagen do Parana (CEDIP), Hospital das Nacoes, Curitiba, PR, 1995–96 | 236 neurology patients with NCC (all ages) | 236 | CT-scan | 7.2% active | Not specified |
|
| Brazil, 1993–4 | People attending the Section of Neuroinfectious Diseases at the Clinicas da Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de Sao Paulo, 1993–94 | 38 neurology patients with NCC (18–60 years old) | 38 | CT-scan + positive CSF immunological test + MRI (cystic lesions) | 76.3% active | Interview (depression) and medical charts |
|
| Brazil, 1990–01 | Catchment population of Ambulatorio de Neurologia do Hospital Universitario Alcides Caeneiro, Paraiba, 1990–01 | 44 neurology patients with NCC (all ages) | 44 | CT –scan | 52.3% active | Standardized medical chart reviews |
|
| Ecuador, 1985–98 | Catchment population of the Department of Neurology of the Eugenio Espejo Hospital in Quito, 1985–88 | 420 neurology patients with a stroke (17–86 years old) | 420 | CT scan, CSF, immunologic tests, other tests | NR | Stroke defined according to Kotila, 1984 (neurological examination) |
|
| Ecuador, 1994–96 | Catchment population of the Department of Neurology, Luis Vernaza Hospital, and at the Neuro-Oncology Service, Instituto Oncologico Nacional, Guayaquil, 1994–96 | 43 neurology patients with cerebral glioma (20–86 years old) | 43 | CT-scan | 100% inactive | Histology of open biopsy (presence of malignant glial cells) |
|
| Mexico, 1989–96 | Catchment pediatric population of the Neurology Department of the Instituto Nacional de Pediatria in Mexico City, 1989–96 | 122 neurology patients with NCC (14 months to 17 years old) | 122 | CT-scan, CSF (n = 71), MRI (n = 20), immunological tests | 82.0% active | Medical charts |
|
| Mexico, 1993–03 | Catchment population of three referral hospitals, Mexico City, 1993–03 | 206 neurology treatment-free NCC patients (11 months - 62 years old) | 206 | CT-scan and/or MRI | 75.7% active | Direct questionnaire (adults, 1 year prospective) or hospital records (children, retrospective) |
|
| Mexico, 1993–96 | People autopsied at the General Hospital of Mexico, 1993–96 | 113 autopsies with malignant hematological diseases (0–80 years old) | 113 | Pathological analysis of the brain (autopsy) | NR | Not provided (autopsy) |
|
| Mexico, 1986–98 | Catchment population of the neurological clinic of the Instituto Nacional y Neurologia Manual Velasco Suarez, 1986–98 | 63 patients with non-aneurysmal sub-arachnoid hemorraghe (19–82 years old) | 50 | CT-scan and MRI (no specific definition provided) | NA | Spontaneous headache or alteration of consciousness w/o trauma and presence of blood in the subarachnoid space |
|
| USA, 1985–91 | Catchment population of the Ben Taug General Hospital of Houston, Houston Texas, 1985–91 | 112 patients with NCC (1–84 years old) | 112 | Discharge diagnosis of NCC (definite or probable, no reference) | 80.4% active | Medical charts |
|
| USA, 1986–94 | Catchment pediatric population of the at Children's Memorial Hospital's emergency room, Chicago, 1986–94 | 47 children with NCC (1–15 years old) | 47 | Biopsy or MRI/CT-scan and serological or CSF tests or MRI/CT and epidemiological link | 56% active from 45 CT-scans | Medical records (medical, laboratory, pathology, outpatient records) |
|
| India, 1984–87 | Pediatric catchment population of the G.B. Pant Hospital, New Delhi, 1984–87 | 27 children with NCC (3–12 years old) | 27 | CT-scan and positiveCSF ELISA and MRI and histological exam | 81.4% positive for CSF ELISA | Not specified |
|
| India, 1979–90 | Pediatric Neurology Clinic patients, New Delhi, 1979–90 | 50 neurology patients with NCC (1–15 years old) | 50 | CT-scan supported by MRI (8), history, serum or CSF antibodies, histology of nodules | 80% active | Medical charts |
|
| PR China, date? | Hospitalised population of the department of neurology, Guangdong Medical University Hospital, Guangdong Province, no dates | 36 inpatients with NCC (14–60 years old) | 36 | CT (31) or MRI (9) of the brain | 78% with active lesions | Not specified |
|
| PR China, 1995–01 | Catchment population of the department of infectious disease, Huaghan Hospital, Shangai, 1995–01 | 125 patients with NCC (2–68 years old) | 125 | MRI or CT scan of the brain showing lesions of NCC (3 were normal) | 90 active, 4 inactive, 31 unknown | Not specified |
|
| PR China, 1997–01 | Catchment population of the NCC institute of the Jilin University, 1997–01 | 210 patients with NCC (< 15 years old) | 210 | MRI or CT scan of the brain AND immunological test positive in the CSF or serum | 83.7% with active lesions | Medical chart reviews |
|
| Portugal, 1983–92 | Catchment population of the reference Hospital Geral de San Antonio, district of Oporto, 1983–92 | 38 patients referred for a CT active NCC (6–62 years old) | 38 | CT-scan (“true” or “probable”) | 100% active | Not specified |
|
| Portugal, 1983–89 | Catchment population of the reference Hospital Geral de San Antonio, district of Oporto, 1983–89 | 231 symptomatic patients referred for a CT with NCC (age unknown) | 144 with symptoms | CT-scan (divided as “true” and “probable”) | 20.0% active; 80.0% inactive | Not specified |
|
| Burkina Faso, 2001–06 | Catchment population of the neurology and radiodiagnosis of the Centre Universitaire Yaldago Ouédraogo, Ouagadougou, 2001–06 | 35 symptomatic patients referred for a CT with NCC (8–78 years old) | 35 | CT-scan | 74.3% active, 25.7% inactive | Medical examination (prospective) |
|
| South Africa, 1984–86 | Catchment population of the Garankuwa hospital, 1984–86 | 88 patients with NCC (adults) | 88 | CT-scan | 100% active | Not specified |
NA: Not applicable.
NR: Not Reported.
Descriptive summary of the studies included for estimating the death rate associated with neurocysticercosis.
| Reference(language) | Country, year(s) of study | Denominator | Source of death data | Measure of mortality |
|
| USA, 1990–02 | Population of the United States 1990–02 | National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) | Age adjusted annual mortality rate |
|
| Brazil, 1985–04 | Population of the state of Sao Paolo, 1985–04 | Death certificates | Over 20 years age- standardized mortality rates |
|
| USA, 1989–00 | Population of California 1989–00 | State of California, Center for Health Statistics, Office of Vital Records | Crude 12 years mortality rate |
|
| USA, 1995–00 | Population of Oregon 1995–00 | State of Oregon Death certificates | Crude 6 years mortality rate |
Pooled estimates of the percentage of manifestations among symptomatic NCC patients using random-effect binomial models.
| Manifestation | Age group | ||
| All | Children | Adults | |
| Seizures/epilepsy | 78.8% (65.1%; 89.7%) | 78.9% (70.5%; 86.2%) | 63.2% (51.9%; 73.8%) |
| Headaches | 37.9% (23.3%; 53.7%) | 27.7% (20.7%; 35.2%) | 25.9% (10.7%; 45.0%) |
| Signs of Intracranial Pressure/Hydrocephalus/Papilledema | 11.7% (6.0%; 18.9%) | 22.7% (10.2%; 38.5%) | 16.3% (5.3%; 31.8%) |
| Meningitis symptoms | 7.9% (2.7%; 15.5%) | 11.2% (5.2%; 19.0%) | 5.6% (1.9%; 12.8%) |
| Cranial nerve palsy | 2.8% (0.1%; 14.5%) | 6.0% (0.6%; 16.2%) | NA |
| Gait abnormality/ataxia | 6.0% (1.9%; 12.1%) | 2.4% (0.2%; 7.2%) | 5.6% (1.9%; 12.8%) |
| Focal deficits | 16.0% (9.7%; 23.6%) | 12.5% (7.6%; 18.4%) | 11.8% (4.1%; 22.9%) |
| Visual changes | 5.6% (1.1%; 13.5%) | 3.5% (1.3%; 6.7%) | NA |
| Altered mental state/psychiatric symptoms | 4.5% (1.5%; 9.0%) | 4.0% (0.5%; 13.4%) | 28.1% (0.5%; 74.9%) |
| Pyramidal signs | NA | 11.6% (0.0%; 42.9%) | NA |
*: One study with binomial 95%CI.
NA: No data Available.
Figure 2Forest plots of the proportion of symptomatic neurocysticercosis cases presenting with seizures/epilepsy.
The forest plots represent A) all age groups, B) Children (0–19 years old) and C) Adults (>19 years old). N/A represents the period of study missing.
Figure 3Forest plots of the proportion of symptomatic neurocysticercosis cases presenting with headaches.
The forest plots represent A) all age groups, B) Children (0–19 years old) and C) Adults (>19 years old). N/A represents the period of study missing.
Figure 4Forest plots of the proportion of symptomatic neurocysticercosis cases presenting with increased intracranial pressure symptoms.
The forest plots represent A) all age groups, B) Children (0–19 years old) and C) Adults (>19 years old). N/A represents the period of study missing.
Figure 5Forest plots of the proportion of symptomatic neurocysticercosis cases presenting with focal deficits.
N/A represents the period of study missing.
Figure 6Forest plots of the proportion of symptomatic neurocysticercosis cases presenting with visual changes.
N/A represents the period of study missing.
Figure 7Forest plots of the proportion of symptomatic neurocysticercosis cases presenting with altered mental state.
Percentage of manifestations reported in symptomatic NCC patients with active and inactive lesions.
| Reference | Country, year(s) of study | Manifestation | Type of lesions | Percentage | 95%CI |
|
| Portugal, 1983–92 | Seizures/Epilepsy | Active | 60.5% | 43.4%–76.0% |
|
| Mexico, 1993–03 | Seizures/Epilepsy | Active | 62.8% | 54.7%–70.4% |
|
| Portugal, 1983–89 | Seizures/Epilepsy | Inactive | 98.3% | 92.6%–99.5% |
|
| Mexico, 1993–03 | Seizures/Epilepsy | Inactive | 88.0% | 75.7%–95.5% |
|
| Portugal 1983–92 | Intracranial Hypertension | Active | 23.7% | 11.1%–40.2% |
|
| Mexico, 1993–03 | Intracranial Hypertension | Active | 28.8% | 21.9%–36.6% |
|
| Portugal, 1983–89 | Intracranial Hypertension | Inactive | NA | NA |
|
| Mexico, 1993–03 | Intracranial Hypertension | Inactive | 0.0% | 0.0%–7.1% |
|
| Portugal, 1983–92 | Hydrocephalus at CT | Active | 23.7% | 11.4%–40.2% |
|
| Portugal, 1983–89 | Hydrocephalus at CT | Inactive | 3.5% | 1.0%–8.7% |
|
| Portugal, 1983–92 | Meningitis | Active | 5.3% | 1.7%–21.4% |
|
| Portugal, 1983–89 | Meningitis | Inactive | 0.9% | 0.0%–4.7% |
Percentage of NCC among people presenting in specific populations.
| Reference | Country, year | Clinical presentation | Number of people with NCC | Number of people with manifestations | % NCC (95% CI) | |
|
| Ecuador, 1994–96 | Cerebral Glioma | 8 | 43 | 18.6% | 7.0%–30.2% |
|
| Mexico, 1993–96 | Malignant hematological disease | 7 | 113 | 6.2% | 1.8%–10.6% |
|
| Ecuador 1985–88 | Stroke | 31 | 420 | 7.4% | 5.1%–10.3% |
|
| Mexico 1986–98 | Non-aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage | 2 | 50 | 4.0% | 0.1%–11.6% |