| Literature DB >> 22666505 |
Christina M Coyle1, Siddhartha Mahanty, Joseph R Zunt, Mitchell T Wallin, Paul T Cantey, A Clinton White, Seth E O'Neal, Jose A Serpa, Paul M Southern, Patricia Wilkins, Anne E McCarthy, Elizabeth S Higgs, Theodore E Nash.
Abstract
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22666505 PMCID: PMC3362619 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0001500
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Estimated Numbers of Persons Infected with Neurocysticercosis or Epilepsy due to Neurocysticercosis by Region.
| Geographic Region | Number Infected | Number with NCC | Number with Epilepsy due to NCC |
| Latin America | 11–29 million | 14.9 million | 0.45–1.35 million |
| India | - | - | 1 million |
| China | 3–7 million | - | 0.3–0.7 million |
| Africa | - | - | 0.31–4.6 million |
See text for methods used to derive these estimates.
Assumes that 10% of those seropositive to T. solium have epilepsy. (Extraction of data from manuscripts summarized in references [7], [11], [31]). Seizure rates in populations seropositive to T. solium were greater than in seronegative populations by approximately 9.4% (range 1.7–31.3%). Therefore, we assumed 10% of seizures were attributable to NCC in Chinese seropositive populations.
Assuming 1/3 of the SSA population of 560 million at risk.
Serologic Studies of Human Cysticercosis/Neurocysticercosis in Sub-Saharan Africa.
| Region | Population Investigated | Percentage Positive (%) | Reference |
| Western Africa | PWE (3 studies; | 1.2–44.6 |
|
| Non-epileptic controls (6 studies; | 0.4–40 |
| |
| Eastern Africa | PWE (3 studies; | 4.9–59.6 |
|
| Patients with other medical issues ( | 12.1 |
| |
| Non-epileptic controls (3 studies; | 2.0–31.5 | Refer to | |
| Southern Africa | PWE ( | 37.0 |
|
| Patients with neurological disorders ( | 12 |
|
PWE, patients with epilepsy.