Literature DB >> 24480313

Neurological and ocular fascioliasis in humans.

Santiago Mas-Coma1, Verónica H Agramunt2, María Adela Valero2.   

Abstract

Fascioliasis is a food-borne parasitic disease caused by the trematode species Fasciola hepatica, distributed worldwide, and Fasciola gigantica, restricted to given regions of Africa and Asia. This disease in humans shows an increasing importance, which relies on its recent widespread emergence related to climate and global changes and also on its pathogenicity in the invasive, biliary, and advanced chronic phases in the human endemic areas, mainly of developing countries. In spite of the large neurological affection capacity of Fasciola, this important pathogenic aspect of the disease has been pronouncedly overlooked in the past decades and has not even appear within the numerous reviews on the parasitic diseases of the central nervous system. The aim of this wide retrospective review is an in-depth analysis of the characteristics of neurological and ocular fascioliasis caused by these two fasciolid species. The terms of neurofascioliasis and ophthalmofascioliasis are restricted to cases in which the direct affection of the central nervous system or the eye by a migrant ectopic fasciolid fluke is demonstrated by an aetiological diagnosis of recovered flukes after surgery or spontaneous moving-out of the fluke through the orbit. Cases in which the ectopic fluke is not recovered and the symptoms cannot be explained by an indirect affection at distance may also be included in these terms. Neurofascioliasis and ophthalmofascioliasis cases are reviewed and discussed. With regard to fascioliasis infection giving an indirect rise to neurological affection, the distribution and frequency of cases are analysed according to geography, sex, and age. Minor symptoms and major manifestations are discussed. Three main types of cases are distinguished depending on the characteristics of their manifestations: genuine neurological, meningeal, and psychiatric or neuropsychic. The impressive symptoms and signs appearing in each type of these cases are included. Brain examination techniques and neuroimaging useful for the diagnosis of neurological cases are exposed. Within fascioliasis infection indirectly causing ocular manifestations, case distribution and frequency are similarly analysed. A short analysis is devoted to clarify the first reports of a human eye infection. The affection of related and close organs is discussed by differentiating between cases of the dorsal spine, pulmonary manifestations, heart and vessel affection, findings in blood vessels, skin and dermatologic reactions, cases of ectopic mature flukes, and upper body locations. The clinical complexity of the puzzling polymorphisms, the disconcerting multifocality of the manifestations, and their changes along the evolution of the disease in the same patient, as well as the differences between the clinical pictures shown by different patients, are highlighted. The many syndromes involved are enumerated. The pathogenic and physiological mechanisms underlying neurofascioliasis and ophthalmofascioliasis caused by ectopic flukes and the physiopathogenic processes indirectly affecting the central nervous system and causing genuine neurological, meningeal, psychiatric, and ocular manifestations are discussed. The diagnosis of neurological and ophthalmologic fascioliasis is analysed in depth, including clinical and paraclinical diagnosis, eosinophilia in the blood and cerebrospinal fluid, differential diagnosis from other parasitic infections such as helminthiases and myiases, an update of human fascioliasis diagnosis, and fluke and/or fluke egg recovery by surgery. Diagnostic analyses with faecal and blood samples for fascioliasis patients are updated. Therapy for patients with major neurological manifestations includes both antiparasitic treatments and anti-inflammatory therapeutics. Prognosis in fascioliasis patients with neurological manifestations is discussed, with emphasis on sequelae and fatal cases, and the care of patients with ophthalmologic manifestations is added. Conclusions indicate that neurological cases are overlooked in human fascioliasis endemic areas and also in developing countries in general. In remote zones, rural health centres and small hospitals in or near the human endemic areas do not dispose of the appropriate equipments for neurological analyses. Moreover, physicians may not be aware about the potential relationship between liver fluke infection and neurological implications, and such cases may therefore remain misdiagnosed, even in developed countries. Priority should henceforth be given to the consideration of neurological and ocular affection in human endemic areas, and efforts should be implemented to assess their characteristics and frequency. Their impact should also be considered when estimating the global burden of fascioliasis.
© 2014 Elsevier Ltd All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Clinical polymorphisms, multifocality, manifestation changes, and syndromes; Diagnosis, treatment, prognosis, sequelae, and fatal cases; Distribution and frequency; Fasciola hepatica, F. gigantica; Human fascioliasis; Minor and major symptoms and signs; Neurofascioliasis and ophthalmofascioliasis; Neurological and ocular affections; Neurological, meningeal, and psychiatric manifestations; Ocular disorders; Pathogenic and physiological mechanisms

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24480313     DOI: 10.1016/B978-0-12-800099-1.00002-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Adv Parasitol        ISSN: 0065-308X            Impact factor:   3.870


  22 in total

Review 1.  Immunodiagnosis of Human Fascioliasis: An Update of Concepts and Performances of the Serological Assays.

Authors:  Bahador Sarkari; Samaneh Abdolahi Khabisi
Journal:  J Clin Diagn Res       Date:  2017-06-01

2.  Buffalo Infection by Fasciola gigantica Transmitted by Radix acuminata in Uttar Pradesh, India: A Molecular Tool to Improve Snail Vector Epidemiology Assessments and Control Surveillance.

Authors:  Kumari Sunita; Santiago Mas-Coma; Maria Dolores Bargues; Mohammad Aasif Khan; Maria Habib; Saad Mustafa; Syed Akhtar Husain
Journal:  Acta Parasitol       Date:  2021-05-21       Impact factor: 1.440

Review 3.  Early Postnatal and Preschool-Age Infection by Fasciola spp.: Report of Five Cases from Vietnam and Worldwide Review.

Authors:  Nguyen Van De; Thanh Hoa Le; Veronica H Agramunt; Santiago Mas-Coma
Journal:  Am J Trop Med Hyg       Date:  2020-10       Impact factor: 3.707

4.  Comparative transcriptome profiling approach to glean virulence and immunomodulation-related genes of Fasciola hepatica.

Authors:  Orçun Haçarız; Mete Akgün; Pınar Kavak; Bayram Yüksel; Mahmut Şamil Sağıroğlu
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2015-05-09       Impact factor: 3.969

5.  Familial Trichostrongylus Infection Misdiagnosed as Acute Fascioliasis.

Authors:  Keyhan Ashrafi; Ali Tahbaz; Meysam Sharifdini; Santiago Mas-Coma
Journal:  Emerg Infect Dis       Date:  2015-10       Impact factor: 6.883

6.  High prevalence of Schistosoma japonicum and Fasciola gigantica in bovines from Northern Samar, the Philippines.

Authors:  Catherine A Gordon; Luz P Acosta; Geoffrey N Gobert; Mario Jiz; Remigio M Olveda; Allen G Ross; Darren J Gray; Gail M Williams; Donald Harn; Yuesheng Li; Donald P McManus
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2015-02-02

7.  Fasciola hepatica reinfection potentiates a mixed Th1/Th2/Th17/Treg response and correlates with the clinical phenotypes of anemia.

Authors:  M Adela Valero; Ignacio Perez-Crespo; Carlos Chillón-Marinas; Messaoud Khoubbane; Carla Quesada; Marta Reguera-Gomez; Santiago Mas-Coma; Manuel Fresno; Núria Gironès
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-03-31       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  DNA multigene characterization of Fasciola hepatica and Lymnaea neotropica and its fascioliasis transmission capacity in Uruguay, with historical correlation, human report review and infection risk analysis.

Authors:  María Dolores Bargues; Valeria Gayo; Jaime Sanchis; Patricio Artigas; Messaoud Khoubbane; Soledad Birriel; Santiago Mas-Coma
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2017-02-03

9.  A Case of Fascioliasis Treated Successfully Without Sequelae in a Japanese Expatriate Living in Jakarta.

Authors:  Masataro Norizuki; Teppei Sasahara; Harumi Gomi; Yuji Morisawa; Noriko Takamura; Tsuneaki Kenzaka; Tetsuro Kobayashi; Yoshihiro Fujiya; Yasuyuki Kato; Hiroyuki Matsuoka
Journal:  Clin Med Insights Case Rep       Date:  2015-08-10

10.  Human fascioliasis endemic areas in Argentina: multigene characterisation of the lymnaeid vectors and climatic-environmental assessment of the transmission pattern.

Authors:  María Dolores Bargues; Jorge Bruno Malandrini; Patricio Artigas; Claudia Cecilia Soria; Jorge Néstor Velásquez; Silvana Carnevale; Lucía Mateo; Messaoud Khoubbane; Santiago Mas-Coma
Journal:  Parasit Vectors       Date:  2016-05-27       Impact factor: 3.876

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