| Literature DB >> 23951367 |
Kirezi Kanobana1, Aniran Ruiz, Lazara Rojas, Rene Andrade, Felix Rosado, Katja Polman, Fidel Angel Núñez.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23951367 PMCID: PMC3708805 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0002202
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Chronological overview of reports on taeniosis/cysticercosis in Cuba.
| Date | Publication Type | Location | Summary | Reference |
| 1901 | Case report (n = 1) | Mexico | A female patient from Cuba who died in a psychiatric asylum in Mexico. During autopsy, multiple cysts were found. The country where the parasitic infection was acquired is not clarified. |
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| 1967 | Cases report (n = 2) | Camagüey, Baracoa | A 23-year-old woman from Camagüey with antecedents of convulsions without medical treatment for 15 years, and a 39-year-old man from Baracoa complaining of headache and vomiting for more than a year. The man was hospitalized because of signs of increasing intracranial pressure and visual disturbances. Both cases were associated with a history of eating raw pork and the diagnosis was confirmed by the detection of cysts in brain biopsies. |
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| 1984 | Case report (n = 1) | History of travel to Angola | A 26-year-old male, coming back from Angola, presenting with abdominal pain, loss of appetite, and drowsiness, with a history of eating pork on regular basis. |
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| 1989 | Case report (n = 1) | Camagüey |
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| 1991 | Cases report (n = 2) | Baracoa | A 29-year-old woman with antecedents of headache, vomiting, and weight loss during the nine months prior to hospital admission. She died in the neurology ward. Cysticercosis was confirmed by postmortem histopathology, which revealed the presence of hooks n the invaginated scolex of one brain cyst.A 10-year-old girl with a palpable subcutaneous cyst on her back. Cysticercosis was confirmed by histopathology upon surgical removal of the nodule. |
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| 1999 | Retrospective study (n = 5/33,424) | Cuba | Retrospective review of clinical cases of patients admitted to the INNH at Havana in the period from 1964 to 1989 was conducted in search of patients diagnosed with NCC. Five patients, of whom three with a history of travel and two of non-Cuban origin, were identified. The clinical history of the cases is described. |
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| 2001 | Retrospective serological survey (n = 0/384) | Havana | Detection of antibodies in cerebrospinal fluid of children attending the emergency ward of the Hospital Pediátrico San Miguel del Padrón in Havana because of seizures. The cohort included children with and without fever with a mean age of 5.6 years. Cysticercal antibodies were detected by a complement fixation assay. |
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| 2010 | Serological survey (n = 158) | Havana | Cohort of 158 PWE (age range: 5–76, 41% males and 59% females) attending the epilepsy consult of the INNH; 21 were suspected of NCC based on epidemiological, clinical, or neuroimaging (CT-scan) grounds. There were no demographic differences between the PWE suspected of NCC and the PWE not suspected of NCC. Serology outcomes by EITB and antigen-ELISA were negative in all patients. |
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This table summarizes the outcome of a literature search in the MEDLINE, PUBMED, LILACS (Latin American and Caribbean Health Science database, http://lilacs.bvsalud.org/en/), and CUMED databases conducted with the keywords Taenia solium, cysticercosis, Cuba, and neurocysticercosis on October 15, 2012. In addition, references of retrieved reports were checked for additional information.
The title of the publication points to a case report of cerebral cysticercosis, but details on the case could not be obtained.
This study was recently conducted by our group (unpublished). PWE = people with epilepsy. NCC = neurocysticercosis.