Pablo Rodríguez Carnero1, Paula Hernández Mateo2, Susana Martín-Garre2, Ángela García Pérez3, Lourdes Del Campo4. 1. Radiology Department, La Princesa University Hospital, Diego de León 62, 28006, Madrid, Spain. pablorodriguezcarner@ucm.es. 2. Radiology Department, Clínico San Carlos University Hospital, Prof. Martín Lagos s/n, 28040, Madrid, Spain. 3. Radiology Department, Gregorio Marañón University Hospital, Dr. Esquerdo 46, 28007, Madrid, Spain. 4. Radiology Department, La Princesa University Hospital, Diego de León 62, 28006, Madrid, Spain.
Abstract
Radiologists seldom encounter parasitic diseases in their daily practice in most of Europe, although the incidence of these diseases is increasing due to migration and tourism from/to endemic areas. Moreover, some parasitic diseases are still endemic in certain European regions, and immunocompromised individuals also pose a higher risk of developing these conditions. This article reviews and summarises the imaging findings of some of the most important and frequent human parasitic diseases, including information about the parasite's life cycle, pathophysiology, clinical findings, diagnosis, and treatment. We include malaria, amoebiasis, toxoplasmosis, trypanosomiasis, leishmaniasis, echinococcosis, cysticercosis, clonorchiasis, schistosomiasis, fascioliasis, ascariasis, anisakiasis, dracunculiasis, and strongyloidiasis. The aim of this review is to help radiologists when dealing with these diseases or in cases where they are suspected. Teaching Points • Incidence of parasitic diseases is increasing due to migratory movements and travelling. • Some parasitic diseases are still endemic in certain regions in Europe. • Parasitic diseases can have complex life cycles often involving different hosts. • Prompt diagnosis and treatment is essential for patient management in parasitic diseases. • Radiologists should be able to recognise and suspect the most relevant parasitic diseases.
Radiologists seldom encounter parasitic diseases in their daily practice in most of Europe, although the incidence of these diseases is increasing due to migration and tourism from/to endemic areas. Moreover, some parasitic diseases are still endemic in certain European regions, and immunocompromised individuals also pose a higher risk of developing these conditions. This article reviews and summarises the imaging findings of some of the most important and frequent human parasitic diseases, including information about the parasite's life cycle, pathophysiology, clinical findings, diagnosis, and treatment. We include malaria, amoebiasis, toxoplasmosis, trypanosomiasis, leishmaniasis, echinococcosis, cysticercosis, clonorchiasis, schistosomiasis, fascioliasis, ascariasis, anisakiasis, dracunculiasis, and strongyloidiasis. The aim of this review is to help radiologists when dealing with these diseases or in cases where they are suspected. Teaching Points • Incidence of parasitic diseases is increasing due to migratory movements and travelling. • Some parasitic diseases are still endemic in certain regions in Europe. • Parasitic diseases can have complex life cycles often involving different hosts. • Prompt diagnosis and treatment is essential for patient management in parasitic diseases. • Radiologists should be able to recognise and suspect the most relevant parasitic diseases.
Parasites are organisms that live in another organism at the host’s
expense, sometimes causing harm and disease in the host itself. Many parasites have
complex life cycles with different stages, some involving intermediary hosts besides
the final host where the mature or adult form of the parasite lives.The human body can be the definitive, intermediate, or accidental host of
several different parasites including protozoa, helminths, arthropods, insects,
amongst others. Several human parasites pose a considerable health problem in
endemic areas, usually affecting the less developed regions of the world [1].Although relatively uncommon in our daily practice in Europe, some of
these parasitic diseases have been recently increasing in incidence due to
immigration from endemic regions and burgeoning tourist travelling to these areas.
Moreover, some parasitic diseases are still endemic in some European regions.
Immunocompromised patients also are at a higher risk of becoming affected by
parasitic diseases and can develop more virulent forms of these conditions.Parasitic diseases can pose a diagnostic challenge and sometimes may not
be included in the initial differential diagnosis. They can be mistaken and simulate
other conditions as infections by other agents, non-infectious inflammatory
disorders, or neoplastic processes. A good clinical setting is essential to suspect
parasitic diseases. Specific and advanced imaging techniques for instance those of
magnetic resonance (e.g. perfusion and diffusion-weighted images, spectroscopy,
cholangiography sequences, hepatobiliary contrast agents), or combined
radiology-nuclear medicine tests, such as positron emission tomography-computed
tomography (PET-CT), can be helpful in solving the differential diagnosis,
especially when parasitic disease mimics malignant neoplasms [2-8].Radiologists may unexpectedly face some of these parasitic diseases in
their practice, hence it is important to be familiar with some of its typical
imaging findings. It is also helpful to understand the basic physiopathology of the
main human parasitic diseases and remember their main clinical findings in order to
achieve a correct diagnosis through a good clinical-radiological correlation, which
leads to a prompt and appropriate treatment of these patients.
Material and methods
We elaborated a list of some of the most prevalent human parasitic
diseases that, although quite infrequent in Europe, most probably could be
encountered in our daily practice as radiologists (Table 1). We searched and reviewed all the patients admitted
to our institutions with any of these parasitic diseases from January 2002 to
January 2016, when our radiology departments had a PACS (Picture Archiving and
Communication System). In those cases in which we did not find representative
images, we had to expand our search before 2002. We retrospectively examined all
imaging tests performed in these patients in the PACS (Picture Archiving and
Communication System) of our institutions (including radiographs, fluoroscopy
examinations, ultrasound, computed tomography, and magnetic resonance). We selected
representative images of each parasitic disease. We reviewed the main imaging
findings of these diseases, life cycle of the parasites, signs and symptoms,
diagnosis, and treatment, as described in the scientific literature.
Table 1
Parasite
Disease
Transmission
& host
Most affected
organs/systems
Characteristic imaging
findings
Protozoa
Plasmodium spp
(P.falciparum, P. vivax, P. malariae, P.
ovale)
Malaria
Vector (Anopheles
mosquito)
Human final host
Systemic
disease
Hepatosplenomegaly
Diffuse cerebral
oedema
Cerebral infarcts
T2 hyperintensity in
cortex, basal ganglia, and
cerebellum
ARDS
Entamoeba
histolytica
Amoebiasis
Fecal-oral (ingestion
of cysts)
Human final host
Gl tract Liver
Liver
abscess
Toxoplasma
gondii
Toxoplasmosis
Fecal-oral (ingestion of
cysts from cat faeces)
Foodborne (ingestion of
cyst-containing meat)
Vertical (mother-foetus)
Human final host
Systemic disease CNS
Cerebral ring
enhancing lesions-”asymmetric target
sign”
Trypanosoma
cruzi
American trypanosomiasis or Chagas
disease
Vector (Triatomine bugs)
Human final host
Gl tract
Heart
Nervous
system
Megaoesophagus
and
megacolon
Myocardiopathy
Leishmania
spp
Leishmaniasis
Vector (Phlebotomus
sandflies)
Human final host
Liver-spleen
(kala-azar)
Skin.
Mucocutaneous
Hepatosplenomegaly
Lymphadenopathy
Cestodes
(tapeworms)
Echinococcus spp (E.
granulosus, E. multilocularis, E. vogeli, E.
oligarthrus)
Echinococcosis or hydatid
disease
Fecal-oral (ingestion of eggs)
Human accidental intermediate host
Liver
Lungs
Hydatid
cysts
Taenia solium
Cysticercosis
and Taeniasis
Cysticercosis: Fecal-oral (ingestion of
eggs)
Human accidental intermediate host
Cysticercosis: CNS
CNS
cysts-”cyst with dot sign”
CNS nodular
calcifications
Trematodes
(flukes)
Clonorchis sinensis (also
Opisthorchis viverrini and O.
felineus)
Clonorchiasis
Foodborne (ingestion
of cyst-containing fish)
Human final host
Biliary system
Dilated intrahepatic bile
ducts
Schistosoma
spp
Schistosomiasis or bilharzia or snail
fever
Direct contact (through skin)
Human final host
Gl tract and liver (portal venous
system)
GU system (paravesical venous
plexus)
Gl:
Chronic liver disease
signs
Portal hypertension signs
Periportal
cuffing
S. japonicum: liver capsule “turtle
back”
GU:
Linear calcifications of
urinary bladder and distal ureter
walls
Fasciola spp (F. hepatica,
F. gigantica)
Fascioliasis or liver
rot
Foodborne (ingestion of parasite-contaminated
vegetables or water)
Foodborne (ingestion of water
contaminated with parasite-infected water fleas)
Human final host
Subcutaneous tissues
“Worm-like"
calcifications in soft
tissues
Anisakis
spp
Anisakiasis
Foodborne (ingestion of
worm-containing fish)
Human accidental intermediate host
Gl tract
Bowel wall submucosal
oedema
Oedema of
Kerckring’s
folds
Ascites
Table 1Vector (Anopheles
mosquito)Human final hostHepatosplenomegalyDiffuse cerebral
oedemaCerebral infarctsT2 hyperintensity in
cortex, basal ganglia, and
cerebellumARDSFecal-oral (ingestion
of cysts)Human final hostFecal-oral (ingestion of
cysts from cat faeces)Foodborne (ingestion of
cyst-containing meat)Vertical (mother-foetus)Human final hostVector (Triatomine bugs)Human final hostGl tractHeartNervous
systemMegaoesophagus
andmegacolonMyocardiopathyVector (Phlebotomus
sandflies)Human final hostLiver-spleen
(kala-azar)Skin.MucocutaneousHepatosplenomegalyLymphadenopathyFecal-oral (ingestion of eggs)Human accidental intermediate hostLiverLungsCysticercosis: Fecal-oral (ingestion of
eggs)Human accidental intermediate hostCNS
cysts-”cyst with dot sign”CNS nodular
calcificationsFoodborne (ingestion
of cyst-containing fish)Human final hostDirect contact (through skin)Human final hostGl tract and liver (portal venous
system)GU system (paravesical venous
plexus)Gl:Chronic liver disease
signsPortal hypertension signsPeriportal
cuffingS. japonicum: liver capsule “turtle
back”GU:Linear calcifications of
urinary bladder and distal ureter
wallsFoodborne (ingestion of parasite-contaminated
vegetables or water)Human final hostLiverBiliary
systemSubcapsular liver lesions (linear,
nodular, clustered)Bile duct dilatationHepatic
subcapsular haematomaFecal-oral (ingestion
of eggs)Human final hostGl tractBiliary
systemLungsAdult worms inside bowel lumen
or biliary treeLungs: Patchy ground-glass
infiltratesDirect contact
(through skin)AutoinfectionHuman final hostLungs and bronchiGl
tractLungs: Miliary nodules, interstitial
infiltrates, alveolar infiltratesBowel wall
oedemaFoodborne (ingestion of water
contaminated with parasite-infected water fleas)Human final hostFoodborne (ingestion of
worm-containing fish)Human accidental intermediate hostBowel wall submucosal
oedemaOedema of
Kerckring’sfoldsAscites
Malaria
The parasite, its cycle, and human infection
Malaria is probably the most devastating parasitic disease in the
world. The 2014 report from the World Health Organization (WHO) estimated that
about 200 million people had been infected in the previous year causing near one
million deaths. This disease is distributed in endemic tropical and subtropical
areas in Africa, South America, and South Asia. It is secondary to infection by
plasmodium protozoa, mainly P. falciparum or P. vivax, and less likely P.
malariae or P. ovale. Transmission occurs from person to person by the bite of
the female Anopheles mosquito. After reaching the bloodstream these parasites
grow within the erythrocytes and are released by cyclic haemolysis.The main symptom of malaria is episodic fever [9-11].
Abdominal signs and symptoms of malaria are usually mild and nonspecific and
include abdominal pain or hepatosplenomegaly [9, 10]. The neurological
manifestations are nonspecific as well, but cerebral malaria can progress
rapidly having a high mortality rate (15–40 %) [9, 11, 12]. The primary
thoracic manifestation of malaria is adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)
[9, 13].
Imaging findings
Imaging findings of malaria are often nonspecific and usually need a
high clinical suspicion to relate them to the plasmodium infection. Abdominal
findings consist of hepatoesplenomegaly with periportal oedema, gallbladder wall
thickening, and ascites (Fig. 1).
Splenic infarction and rupture have also been reported [9, 10]. Central
nervous system (CNS) infection is usually caused by P. falciparum, a more
aggressive form of malaria. It can manifest with different degrees of affection,
ranging from a normal brain (30-50 % cases) to diffuse cerebral oedema
with or without focal infarcts [14].
Petechial haemorrhages can be seen on magnetic resonance (MR) as high signal
foci on T1-weighted images (T1WI) and small foci of low signal on T2*-weighted
images. T2-weighted images (T2WI) demonstrates hyperintensity in the cortex,
basal ganglia, and cerebellum [9, 11–13, 15]. The
primary thoracic manifestation is ARDS consisting of diffuse interstitial
oedema. Pleural effusions and lobar consolidations may also be seen, usually
secondary to P. falciparum and associated with mortality up to 80 %
[9, 16].
Fig. 1
32-year-old
patient, recently travelling from Cameroon and with previous history
of malaria, presenting with fever, chills, generalised abdominal
pain, and myalgia. The image of an abdominal US scan depicts
splenomegaly of 17 cm. Plasmodium falciparum was detected in
blood exams (the parasite was seen in thick blood smears, and
antigens were also positive)
32-year-old
patient, recently travelling from Cameroon and with previous history
of malaria, presenting with fever, chills, generalised abdominal
pain, and myalgia. The image of an abdominal US scan depicts
splenomegaly of 17 cm. Plasmodium falciparum was detected in
blood exams (the parasite was seen in thick blood smears, and
antigens were also positive)
Diagnosis and treatment
Diagnosis is made by the identification of trophozoites in thick or
thin blood smears. Antigens can also be detected in blood. As this disease has
no specific radiological findings, it can only be suggested by radiologists
under a very high clinical suspicion, as in febrile patients returning from
endemic areas.Malaria is treated with specific antimalarial antibiotics (e.g.
quinine, chloroquine), together with supportive therapy and anticonvulsant drugs
in case of seizures [9, 17].
Amoebiasis
Amoebiasis is widely spread all over the world, but is more prevalent
in India, the Far East, Africa, and Central and South America. It is mainly
caused by the Entamoeba histolytica protozoa. Other amoeboids such as Naegleria
fowleri, Acanthamoeba astronyxis, and Balamuthia mandrilaris can also cause
human infections [9]. Humans become
infected by ingestion of contaminated food or water containing amoebic cysts
[4, 9, 18, 19]. These cysts become trophozoites that invade the bowel
wall mucosa entering the portal circulation [9, 18].E. histolytica infects the gastrointestinal tract sometimes remaining
in a latent stage for many years, but other times it can cause more aggressive
forms of the disease ranging from colitis to dysentery, or liver, thoracic, and
more rarely brain abscesses and meningoencephalitis [4, 9, 18–20].Amoebic liver abscess is the most frequent extraintestinal
complication of amoebiasis, and its imaging features are sometimes
indistinguishable from a pyogenic abscess; however, epidemiologic and clinical
features, as well as positive amoebic antibodies, help to make the diagnosis.
Ultrasound scans (US), computed tomography (CT), and MR are useful to detect
these liver lesions. These abscesses tend to be located near the capsule and
usually have an enhancing thick wall with perilesional oedema [4, 9, 18, 21] Fig. 2.
Fig. 2
Amoebic liver
abscess. a Axial US image shows a rounded, well-defined
hypoechoic lesion with thick walls, located in the right hepatic
lobe (arrows). Note the posterior acoustic
enhancement that prompts a partially cystic nature. b
Axial image of a contrast-enhanced CT from the same patient as in
figure a, showing a large cystic mass with solid walls in the right
hepatic lobe. Note the enhanced thickened wall of the lesion and
perilesional oedema (arrows). The patient had
positive serology for E. histolytica (IgG antibodies), and amoebic
cysts were found in the faeces. The patient was treated successfully
with amoebicidal drugs with complete resolution of the liver
abscess
Amoebic liver
abscess. a Axial US image shows a rounded, well-defined
hypoechoic lesion with thick walls, located in the right hepatic
lobe (arrows). Note the posterior acoustic
enhancement that prompts a partially cystic nature. b
Axial image of a contrast-enhanced CT from the same patient as in
figure a, showing a large cystic mass with solid walls in the right
hepatic lobe. Note the enhanced thickened wall of the lesion and
perilesional oedema (arrows). The patient had
positive serology for E. histolytica (IgG antibodies), and amoebic
cysts were found in the faeces. The patient was treated successfully
with amoebicidal drugs with complete resolution of the liver
abscessThoracic infection is the second most common manifestation of
extraintestinal amoebiasis and may result mainly from direct extension from an
hepatic abscess to the thorax or by haematogenous spread, with pleural effusion
the most common manifestation, followed by lung consolidations. There can be a
fistula from the liver infection to the airway through the diaphragm, leading to
an hepatobronchial or bronchobiliary fistula [9, 18].Imaging of amoebic meningoencephalitis is nonspecific and has rarely
been described. In healthy patients it can cause a primary form of
meningoencephalitis (PAM) with a fulminant course in most cases and a mild
long-term form in immunocompromised patients called granulomatous
meningoencephalitis (GAE) [9, 20, 22]. In CT, GAE may show multifocal enhancing lesions in the cortex
and brainstem. In MR small hyperintense lesions on T2WI can be seen with
heterogeneous or ring-like pattern of enhancement. PAM may show a brain pattern
of oedema and hydrocephalus, with rapid progression of the disease [20].Since imaging features of amoebic disease are quite unspecific,
diagnosis is made on culture, serology, or immunofluorescence on biopsy
specimens. Amoebic cysts can be found in the faeces. The classic anchovy
paste-like material can be obtained from an amoebic abscess. After the diagnosis
is confirmed amoebicidal therapy such as metronidazole or ketoconazole should be
started, as it is highly effective. Catheter drainage of abscesses performed
with imaging guidance is sometimes performed.
Toxoplasmosis
Toxoplasmosis is the most prevalent parasitic disease worldwide, and
it is caused by Toxoplasma gondii, which is a protozoan affecting one third of
the total global population. It is more frequent in the tropics and in warm
areas where cats are numerous. The T. gondii life cycle has two differentiated
phases. The so-called sexual phase takes places in felines, which are the
parasite’s primary host. The following asexual phase can occur in other
warm-blooded animals, including humans [8, 9, 23].Infection in humans can happen by three means: fecal-oral transmission
through the ingestion of an infected cat’s faeces (usually through
contaminated fruits and vegetables), foodborne through the ingestion of
toxoplasma cysts in poorly cooked meat (mainly pork, lamb, or venison), or
vertical transmission from the mother to the foetus. Toxoplasma cysts are mostly
found in skeletal muscle, heart, and brain, and they can remain latent or course
subclinically in healthy adults [8, 23]. Foetal infection can cause congenital
toxoplasmosis coursing with a wide spectrum of manifestations, from mild
symptoms that can remain unapparent until late in infancy, to more fatal and
severe forms in newborns that are now rare thanks to preventive and protective
measures during pregnancy. The most affected group of population by
toxoplasmosis are immunocompromised individuals such as AIDS and bone marrow
transplanted patients often developing more aggressive forms of the disease,
especially in the CNS [8, 9, 24].This parasite infects the CNS of approximately 10 % of AIDS or
immunocompromised patients. Most lesions are located in the basal ganglia,
corticomedullary junction, white matter, and periventricular region due to its
haematogenous spread [8, 9, 23, 24]. MR has proved to be
the most sensitive imaging modality for the detection of cerebral toxoplasmosis,
and it is able to delineate the true extent of the disease [8].Brain infection produces scattered lesions showing low attenuation on
CT, low or high signal on T1WI (suggesting haemorrhagic components), and high
signal on T2WI with surrounding oedema. Toxoplasmosis lesions show homogeneous
nodular or ring enhancement (Fig. 3)
[8, 9, 23–26]. In immunocompromised patients,
enhancement may vary according to their cellular immunological response; if
there is poor enhancement it may be minimal or absent. An imaging finding highly
suggestive for toxoplasmosis is the “asymmetric target sign,”
which is a small eccentric nodule along the wall of the enhancing ring, likely
representing a thrombosed vein (Fig. 3d) [23, 25, 27]. Diffusion- and perfusion-weighted images (DWI and PWI) and
spectroscopy can be valuable tools to differentiate toxoplasmosis from other
mimicking conditions, such as brain lymphoma and other infections, particularly
in immunocompromised patients. Toxoplasmosis can show peripheral restricted
diffusion, while pyogenic abscesses typically show central restricted diffusion,
PWI is low in toxoplasmosis and high in lymphoma and other neoplasms. Increased
lipid-lactate peak in spectroscopy is characteristic of both toxoplasma and
pyogenic abscesses [8, 28–30]. Thalium single-photon emission computed tomography
and PET-CT usually show lower uptake in toxoplasmosis and higher in lymphoma
[31-34].
Fig.
3
Intracranial toxoplasmosis in a 45-year-old
patient with AIDS. a. Contrast-enhanced CT displays a
hypoattenuating lesion with ring-enhancement in the right hemisphere
of the cerebellum (arrow). b and
c Axial fluid-attenuated inversion recovery MR
images showing multiple brain lesions predominantly located in the
grey-white matter junction, with mild mass-effect and some of them
with surrounding oedema (arrows). d
Gadolinium-enhanced axial T1-weighted MR image, the lesions
(arrows) show ring-enhancement and a small
eccentric nodule inside, the “asymmetric target
sign,” which is suggestive of
toxoplasmosis
Intracranial toxoplasmosis in a 45-year-old
patient with AIDS. a. Contrast-enhanced CT displays a
hypoattenuating lesion with ring-enhancement in the right hemisphere
of the cerebellum (arrow). b and
c Axial fluid-attenuated inversion recovery MR
images showing multiple brain lesions predominantly located in the
grey-white matter junction, with mild mass-effect and some of them
with surrounding oedema (arrows). d
Gadolinium-enhanced axial T1-weighted MR image, the lesions
(arrows) show ring-enhancement and a small
eccentric nodule inside, the “asymmetric target
sign,” which is suggestive of
toxoplasmosisThe lungs and heart are the most frequently affected organs after the
CNS. Radiologic manifestations are nonspecific and may be similar to other
opportunistic diseases in immunocompromised patients. Diffuse bilateral
reticulonodular opacities in the lungs are the most frequent thoracic finding
[9].In congenital infection, calcifications, hydrocephalus, and
microcephaly are common [25, 26]. Other congenital findings are ascites
and hepatosplenomegaly [26].A positive antibody titre for T. gondii is not diagnostic of active
toxoplasmosis, it only indicates that there has been contact with the parasite.
Prevalence of toxoplasma seropositivity is very variable in Europe, ranging from
10 % up to 90 % in some regions [35]. Up to 20 % of patients with AIDS may not have
detectable antitoxoplasma antibodies. Polymerase chain reaction testing (PCR) of
peripheral blood samples has a high sensitivity and specificity for the
diagnosis [24].Concerning treatment, various antitoxoplasma agents are available such
as pyrimethamine alone or combined with sulfadiazine [8, 9, 24]. Once toxoplasmosis is suspected by
imaging criteria and serologic tests are positive, medication is begun and the
response of treatment can be monitored with clinical examination and CT or
MR.
American trypanosomiasis or Chagas disease
Trypanosoma cruzi is the aetiologic agent for the American
trypanosomiasis or Chagas disease, and it is widely spread in Central and South
America.This parasite is acquired by humans when the vector of the parasite,
an insect from the Triatominae family, bites the individual and defecates
infected faeces on the skin [9, 18]. If the bite occurs near the eyes,
periorbital oedema appears and is called Romaña’s sign. The
indurated skin lesion is called “chagoma” in other regions of
the body [36]. Scratching of the bite
favours the inoculation of the parasites from the infected faeces. The parasites
multiply within the macrophages, which eventually rupture and release
amastigotes that enter the bloodstream invading diverse organs such as the heart
and the gastrointestinal tract [18].This disease has different stages. Acute manifestations are uncommon
and may include fever, myocarditis, and rarely meningoencephalitis in
immunocompromised individuals [9, 18, 37]. Later, in the subacute phase, hepatosplenomegaly and
lymphadenopathy are the most common findings. Around 15-30 % of the
infected individuals develop chronic forms of the disease, mainly affecting the
heart, digestive tract, and nervous system.Gastrointestinal compromise in the chronic form of the disease is
related to damage to neurons of the myenteric plexuses, with development of
megaoesophagus (chagasic achalasia) and megacolon [18]. Fluoroscopic studies (single- or double-contrast
oesophagography and barium enema) usually confirm this condition showing massive
dilatation of the oesophagus and colon (Fig. 4a) [9, 38].
Fig. 4
a Barium enema images of a 42-year-old patient native
to Bolivia, it shows megacolon fundamentally at the expense of
sigmoid colon (s). Chagas disease was confirmed by serologic
testing. b and c Cardiac chronic Chagas
disease. 50-year-old male from Bolivia. Cardiac MR delayed
contrast-enhanced sequence with four-chamber view (b)
and two-chamber short axis view (c); some areas of
delayed transmural enhancement can be appreciated in the left
ventricle (arrows) with a non-coronary territory
distribution, indicating myocardial fibrosis or necrosis. Note the
basal inferolateral and apical locations, the most frequently
affected areas in cardiac chronic Chagas
affection
a Barium enema images of a 42-year-old patient native
to Bolivia, it shows megacolon fundamentally at the expense of
sigmoid colon (s). Chagas disease was confirmed by serologic
testing. b and c Cardiac chronic Chagas
disease. 50-year-old male from Bolivia. Cardiac MR delayed
contrast-enhanced sequence with four-chamber view (b)
and two-chamber short axis view (c); some areas of
delayed transmural enhancement can be appreciated in the left
ventricle (arrows) with a non-coronary territory
distribution, indicating myocardial fibrosis or necrosis. Note the
basal inferolateral and apical locations, the most frequently
affected areas in cardiac chronic Chagas
affectionCardiac manifestations of chronic Chagas include chronic myocarditis
with focal and diffuse affection and leading to fibrosis, myocardial necrosis,
and atrophy. Myocardial fibrosis or necrosis is seen in MR as a characteristic
delayed contrast enhancement after intravenous (iv) injection of gadolinium
contrast with a transmural, subepicardial, or midwall distribution. The left
ventricle inferolateral basal segments and the apical region are most commonly
affected (Fig. 4b-c). Another
characteristic feature of chronic Chagas disease is an apical aneurysm of the
left ventricle with transmural delayed enhancement [9, 18, 39].The diagnosis is usually made by detecting in the patient’s
blood either the parasite or antibodies against it, where PCR is the most useful
technique, especially in infected patients with borderline serology not detected
by other methods [9, 18].During the acute phase of Chagas disease, anti-Chagas drugs such as
benzinidazole and nifurtimox may heal the disease. Unfortunately, once the
disease reaches its chronic phase, antiparasitic drugs will not be able to cure
it definitely, and treatment will be based on trying to palliate specific
chronic conditions such as the cardiac or gastrointestinal affections [40].
Leishmaniasis
Leishmaniasis is a disease striking the less developed areas of
Southeast Asia, East Africa, and Latin America, but it is also endemic in
several Mediterranean countries. Caused by Leishmania spp, there are three main
types of leishmaniasis: visceral or kala-azar, which is the most deadly
parasitic disease after malaria, cutaneous, and mucocutaneous. Leishmaniasis is
transmitted by the bite of certain species of sand flies from the genus
Phlebotomus. The increase of this disease in developed countries is related to
immunodepression and the rise of international movements of people due to
migration or tourism [9, 41].The imaging findings of leishmaniasis are nonspecific, usually
consisting of hepatosplenomegaly and enlargement of lymph nodes
(Fig. 5). Rarely, hepatic or
splenic nodules are seen on visceral leishmaniasis, appearing in US as solid
nodules in surrounded by a peripheral hypoechoic halo and hypovascular lesions
on CT and MR [9].
Fig. 5
Visceral leishmaniasis. 52-year-old
patient native to Peru, presenting with fever, weight loss, and
pancytopenia. Serological exams confirmed leishmaniasis.
a Sagittal US image shows splenomegaly.
b Contrast-enhanced CT image shows
hepatosplenomegaly
Visceral leishmaniasis. 52-year-old
patient native to Peru, presenting with fever, weight loss, and
pancytopenia. Serological exams confirmed leishmaniasis.
a Sagittal US image shows splenomegaly.
b Contrast-enhanced CT image shows
hepatosplenomegalyThe diagnosis can be established by serologic exam or skin testing of
the leishmania antigen, and it can be confirmed by the detection of the
intracellular parasite in liver, spleen, or bone marrow biopsy [9, 41].After confirmation of the disease, appropriate treatment with
liposomal amphotericin B is usually started. It is the most used drug in
travellers returning from endemic areas [41].
Echinococcosis or hydatid disease
Echinococcosis is caused by Echinococcus tapeworms, mainly E.
granulosus (cystic echinococcosis) and less frequently E. multilocularis
(alveolar echinococcosis). E. vogeli and E. oligarthrus are much less common. It
is a worldwide infection endemic in herding and grazing regions of the
Mediterranean, the Americas, Russia, Central Asia, and China [42].Dogs and other canidae are the main definitive host, in whose small
intestine lives the adult worm. Definitive hosts release the eggs of the
parasite in their faeces and the intermediate hosts (usually sheep or goats) eat
them becoming infected and developing hydatid cysts in different organs. The
definitive host gets infected through the ingestion of intermediate hosts flesh
infected with cysts.Humans can accidentally become intermediate hosts after the ingestion
of the worm’s eggs present in contaminated food, water, or soil, but
usually the cycle of the Echinococcus ends in them. In the intestine the eggs
release the embryos (onchospheres) which penetrate the bowel wall and enter
portal or lymphatic circulation. The onchospheres usually settle in the liver,
followed by the lung. Once in a solid organ the onchospheres turn into the
larval stage forming the hydatid cyst, which can remain viable for years [9, 42].There are two main classifications of echinococcal cysts based on US
patterns of hepatic cysts that mostly apply to E. granulosus: the Gharby
classification of 1981 and the WHO classification of 2003 [43, 44]. The WHO
classification has also proved to be applicable in other locations and with
other imaging techniques, for example in cerebral hydatid cysts evaluated with
MR [45]. There is also a more simple
radiological classification (from type I to type III cysts, where type IV are
complicated cysts) [46, 47]. These classifications correlate with
the progressive degeneration of the hydatid cysts Table 2.
Table
2
Classifications of the hepatic hydatid cysts
and their imaging correlate
Classifications of the hepatic hydatid cysts
and their imaging correlateType I cyst of the radiological classification is the earliest stage
Fig. 6a. They are unilocular
cysts that can be confused with other simple cysts. Some features can help
rising the suspicion, such as the presence of denser material in the cyst
(“falling snowflakes” inside the cyst in the US, or higher
attenuation contents in CT), thicker walls, or the presence of a low signal
intensity rim in T2WI MR, likely representing that the pericyst is rich in
fibrotic tissue [48, 49]. Type I cysts correspond to WHO
classifications CL (when the cyst wall is not visible) and CE 1 (when the cyst
wall is visible).
Fig. 6
Hepatic
echinococcal cysts. a Type I cyst (WHO CE 1).
Contrast-enhanced CT image of a unilocular echinococcal cyst in the
right hepatic lobe, note the thicker anterior wall
(asterisk). b Type II cyst (WHO CE
2). Contrast-enhanced CT image of a multilocular echinococcal cyst
in the right hepatic lobe containing multiple daughter cysts in the
periphery and mimicking a “rosette”
(arrows). c. Type II cyst with
contained ruptured (WHO CE 3). Axial US image shows floating
membranes (“water-lily sign”) inside a cyst,
consistent with rupture of the endocyst or daughter cysts.
d Type III cyst (WHO CE 5). Fragment of an
abdominal radiograph that incidentally showed a calcified hepatic
hydatid cyst (arrow)
Hepatic
echinococcal cysts. a Type I cyst (WHO CE 1).
Contrast-enhanced CT image of a unilocular echinococcal cyst in the
right hepatic lobe, note the thicker anterior wall
(asterisk). b Type II cyst (WHO CE
2). Contrast-enhanced CT image of a multilocular echinococcal cyst
in the right hepatic lobe containing multiple daughter cysts in the
periphery and mimicking a “rosette”
(arrows). c. Type II cyst with
contained ruptured (WHO CE 3). Axial US image shows floating
membranes (“water-lily sign”) inside a cyst,
consistent with rupture of the endocyst or daughter cysts.
d Type III cyst (WHO CE 5). Fragment of an
abdominal radiograph that incidentally showed a calcified hepatic
hydatid cyst (arrow)Type II cysts (WHO CE 2) contain daughter cysts in the periphery
appearing as multiseptated cysts mimicking a “rosette”. Usually
the mother cyst has a denser content than the daughter cysts that can be seen
with a higher attenuation in CT and with different signal intensity in MR [47, 50] Fig. 6b.
Contained ruptures of the cyst due to trauma, treatment or spontaneous
degeneration appear as floating membranes (“water-lily sign”),
and are classified as WHO CE 3 (Fig. 6c)
[49, 51]. The presence of calcifications in the cysts
correlates with its degeneration, but unless the cyst is completely calcified it
does not imply that all larvae are necessarily dead. WHO stage CE 4 is between
type II and type III cysts; they are degenerating cysts that are heterogeneous
and can have a solid appearance.Type III cyst (WHO CE 5) are chronic hydatid cysts almost completely
calcified, usually indicating that there are no more living parasites.
Calcifications are typically curvilinear. Some calcified cysts can be
incidentally discovered in asymptomatic patients usually on CT or even on
conventional radiographs (Fig. 6d) [48,
49, 52].Lungs are the second most common organ of hydatid affection in adults,
and arguably the most frequent place of infection in children. Because the lungs
have parenchymal architecture, the cysts can reach bigger dimensions there and
can destroy surrounding bronchi establishing communication with the airway and
leading to the expectoration of cyst components by the patient and the filling
of the cyst with air (Fig. 7a–b). Transdiaphragmatic infective route from the liver can
also occur [47, 49, 53].
Fig. 7
Echinococcosis. a
Chest radiograph. There is a cystic lesion in the right lower lobe
(arrow) with an air-fluid level corresponding
to a pulmonary hydatid cyst communicated with the airway. The
patient had expectoration of cyst components. b CT
image of the same patient as in figure a, showing the hydatid cyst
communicating with a subsegmental bronchus (arrow).
c Contrast-enhanced CT image showing a complex
lesion in the left kidney (arrows) containing dense
material and membranes, and having a partially calcified wall, it
proved to be a renal hydatid cyst surgically and
histopathologically. d Multiple cystic lesions in the
liver and peritoneum, some with partially calcified walls, which
also proved to be hydatid disease surgically and histopathologically
(arrowheads). e T2-weighted double
inversion recovery MR image of the heart. It shows a hyperintense
intramyocardial lesion in the posterobasal segment of the left
ventricle that proved to be a hydatid cyst surgically and
histopathologically (white arrow) f
Gadolinium-enhanced fat-saturated T1-weighted double inversion
recovery MR image of the heart, from the same patient as in
e. It shows subtle peripheral enhancement of the
lesion intramyocardial lesion (arrow), and
pericardial effusion (asterisk) with pericardial
enhancement (arrowheads) indicating
pericarditis
Echinococcosis. a
Chest radiograph. There is a cystic lesion in the right lower lobe
(arrow) with an air-fluid level corresponding
to a pulmonary hydatid cyst communicated with the airway. The
patient had expectoration of cyst components. b CT
image of the same patient as in figure a, showing the hydatid cyst
communicating with a subsegmental bronchus (arrow).
c Contrast-enhanced CT image showing a complex
lesion in the left kidney (arrows) containing dense
material and membranes, and having a partially calcified wall, it
proved to be a renal hydatid cyst surgically and
histopathologically. d Multiple cystic lesions in the
liver and peritoneum, some with partially calcified walls, which
also proved to be hydatid disease surgically and histopathologically
(arrowheads). e T2-weighted double
inversion recovery MR image of the heart. It shows a hyperintense
intramyocardial lesion in the posterobasal segment of the left
ventricle that proved to be a hydatid cyst surgically and
histopathologically (white arrow) f
Gadolinium-enhanced fat-saturated T1-weighted double inversion
recovery MR image of the heart, from the same patient as in
e. It shows subtle peripheral enhancement of the
lesion intramyocardial lesion (arrow), and
pericardial effusion (asterisk) with pericardial
enhancement (arrowheads) indicating
pericarditisHydatid cysts in other locations are rare, being the kidneys and
peritoneum one the most frequent sites. The imaging appearance of hydatid cysts
in other solid organs is similar to the hepatic hydatid cysts. Peritoneal
seeding is most of the times secondary to ruptured hepatic cysts either
spontaneously or during an interventional or surgical procedure
Fig. 7c–f.E. multilocularis infection is much less common. The lesions tend to
be more invasive mimicking neoplasms. Its cysts are typically multiloculated
resembling alveoli, hence the name of alveolar echinococcosis [4, 47]. Accurately distinguishing the different types of Echinococci
species by imaging can be difficult.Radiologist can be the first ones to detect hydatid infection,
sometimes incidentally in asymptomatic patients. Imaging can also help
classifying the stage of the cysts and therefore hint its activity. Exact
diagnosis of the infecting species is given by serology, histopathology, or
immunohistochemistry.Traditional standard treatment for hydatid cysts has been surgical
removal combined with antiparasitic drugs (mainly albendazole or mebendazole).
Percutaneous drainage of the cysts (puncture, aspiration, injection of
scolicidal agent, re-aspiration) can also be performed by radiologists in
selected patients, especially in non-complicated type I and type II cysts or in
patients that are not suitable for surgical treatment [38-41].
Cysticercosis
Cysticercosis is caused by Taenia solium, also known as pork tapeworm.
It poses a health problem especially in Latin America, sub-Saharan Africa,
South-East Asia, China, and the Indian subcontinent [54].T. solium lives in the small intestine of humans, their definitive
host. Their eggs are released with the faeces and ingested by pigs, the
intermediate host. When pigs are infected they develop cysts in their soft
tissues (cysticerci). The cycle is closed when the humans ingest raw or poorly
cooked pork containing cysticerci and develop the adult tapeworm in their
intestine (taeniasis) [55].Cysticercosis happens when humans accidentally become the intermediate
host by ingesting water, food, or soil contaminated with eggs of the parasite.
The eggs release the embryos (onchospheres) in the bowel lumen, which penetrate
the intestine wall entering portal circulation. The onchospheres will end up
lodging in the capillaries of richly perfused tissues, mainly CNS, eyes,
skeletal muscle, and subcutaneous tissue, in this order [42-46].Neurocysticercosis is the most frequent parasitic disease of the CNS.
It can be subarachnoid-cisternal (the most frequent form), parenchymal (the
second most common and typically located in the corticomedullary junction),
intraventricular, and spinal [53, 56–58]. It can be asymptomatic or have symptoms depending on
the location, number, size, and stage of the lesions, and the aggressiveness of
the immune reaction. The most frequent clinical presentation is epilepsy,
followed by headache and symptoms derived from cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)
obstruction. Neurocysticercosis is the most common cause of acquired epilepsy in
developing countries [55, 59].As neurocysticercosis is the most common form of this parasitic
infection this chapter concentrates in its imaging findings. Neurocysticercosis
is classified in five stages regarding their evolution from active larvae to
dead lesions due to natural degeneration, host immune response and/or therapy:
non-cystic, vesicular, colloidal vesicular, granular nodular, and calcified
nodular (Table 3). This degeneration
can last years, and a combination of the different stages can be seen in the
same individual [60, 61].
Table
3
Main stages of neurocysticercosis in
imaging
Main stages of neurocysticercosis in
imagingNon-cystic neurocysticercosis is the first stage, usually asymptomatic
and not correlated with imaging findings. The vesicular stage is a cyst or a
group of cysts (racemose form) containing the larvae or protoscolex. The cyst
has content similar to the CSF in CT and MR and the protoscolex can be seen
inside as an eccentric dot with high signal intensity on T1WI, the “cyst
with dot” sign. As there is no or scant host reaction, little or no
surrounding oedema, and no enhancement is seen (Fig. 8a) [55, 60, 62, 63]. In colloidal
vesicular stage the parasite begins to degenerate and the host develops a
stronger immune response. The fluid of the cyst turns denser and thus appears
with higher signal on MR and higher attenuation on CT. The inflammatory response
leads to surrounding oedema and ring enhancement of the cyst (Fig 8b-c) [55, 64]. In the granular
nodular phase the cyst shrinks, the acute immune response decreases, and it is
progressively replaced by gliosis, imaging findings can be similar to colloidal
vesicular stage. The end stage, the calcified nodular phase, represents the dead
parasite. CT is superior to MR when detecting the calcified lesions of this
stage (Fig. 8d) [55].
Fig.
8
Neurocysticercosis. a Vesicular
stage. Gadolinium-enhanced axial T1-weighted MR image. Cystic lesion
in the right ventricular atrium (arrow) whose
content similar to the CSF; inside there is an eccentric dot with
high signal intensity representing the protoscolex (“cyst
with dot” sign). There is no enhancement as there is no or
scant host reaction in this stage. b Colloidal
vesicular stage. Axial fluid-attenuated inversion recovery MR image.
There are several lesions located in the subarachnoid space and
corticomedullary junction and one in the left thalamus, they have a
content, which is denser than the CSF (is has a higher signal
intensity) and are surrounded by marked oedema. c
Colloidal vesicular stage. Gadolinium-enhanced axial T1-weighted MR
image of the same patient as in c. The lesions show
ring enhancement. d Calcified nodular phase. CT image
showing multiple calcified lesions dispersed in the brain parenchyma
mostly in the corticomedullary junction and subarachnoid space, and
some of them in the right basal ganglia. They represent calcified
granulomata in dead neurocysticercosis
Neurocysticercosis. a Vesicular
stage. Gadolinium-enhanced axial T1-weighted MR image. Cystic lesion
in the right ventricular atrium (arrow) whose
content similar to the CSF; inside there is an eccentric dot with
high signal intensity representing the protoscolex (“cyst
with dot” sign). There is no enhancement as there is no or
scant host reaction in this stage. b Colloidal
vesicular stage. Axial fluid-attenuated inversion recovery MR image.
There are several lesions located in the subarachnoid space and
corticomedullary junction and one in the left thalamus, they have a
content, which is denser than the CSF (is has a higher signal
intensity) and are surrounded by marked oedema. c
Colloidal vesicular stage. Gadolinium-enhanced axial T1-weighted MR
image of the same patient as in c. The lesions show
ring enhancement. d Calcified nodular phase. CT image
showing multiple calcified lesions dispersed in the brain parenchyma
mostly in the corticomedullary junction and subarachnoid space, and
some of them in the right basal ganglia. They represent calcified
granulomata in dead neurocysticercosisIntraventricular and spinal cysticercosis rare and usually caused by
CSF seeding Figs. 8a and 9.
Fig.
9
Spinal neurocysticercosis. a Axial
T2-weighted MR image, showing a cystic lesion in the subarachnoid
space of the dural sac in the sacrum. There is a dot with lower
signal intensity inside the cyst representing the protoscolex
(“cyst with dot” sign) in a vesicular stage.
b Coronal T2-weighted MR image of the same patient
as in a. The intradural cyst (arrows)
has a signal intensity similar to the CSF, note also the thin walls
and the high signal intensity protoscolex inside the cyst, these are
typical findings of a vesicular stage
neurocysticercosis
Spinal neurocysticercosis. a Axial
T2-weighted MR image, showing a cystic lesion in the subarachnoid
space of the dural sac in the sacrum. There is a dot with lower
signal intensity inside the cyst representing the protoscolex
(“cyst with dot” sign) in a vesicular stage.
b Coronal T2-weighted MR image of the same patient
as in a. The intradural cyst (arrows)
has a signal intensity similar to the CSF, note also the thin walls
and the high signal intensity protoscolex inside the cyst, these are
typical findings of a vesicular stage
neurocysticercosisPatients can also develop other complications such as arteritis and
arachnoiditis.Diagnosis of neurocysticercosis is based on a combination of clinical
examination, medical records, imaging findings (CT and MR) and a serological or
CSF detection of antibodies. Sometimes radiologists are the first ones to find
cysticercosis lesions and thus play an important role in detecting or raising
the suspicion of this parasitic disease.Treatment of active neurocysticercosis is based on antiparasitic drugs
(mainly praziquantel and/or albendazole) sometimes combined with steroids.
Intraventricular or spinal cysts may require surgical removal.
Clonorchiasis
Clonorchis sinensis is a liver fluke, endemic along river basins in
East Asia, including Northeast China, Manchuria region, Korea, Amur basin in
Russia, Taiwan, and Vietnam [65].
Opisthorchis viverrini and O. felineus have a very similar life cycles and
almost indistinguishable clinical and imaging findings [66].C. sinensis life cycle requires 3 different hosts: fresh water snails
(Parafossarulus spp and Bithynia spp mainly), fresh water fish (Cyprinid
family), and mammals (e.g. humans, dogs, cats, pigs, rats, badges, or weasels).
The snails eat C. sinensis eggs, which will turn into the larval stage
(cercariae). Cercariae are released to water and actively invade the mucosae or
skin of the fish becoming encysted (metacercariae) in their muscles and soft
tissues. [67, 68].Definitive hosts, including humans, are affected when eating raw or
poorly cooked infected fish. Metacercariae are liberated in the duodenum and
migrate to the biliary tree through the ampulla of Vater, lodging in the small
intrahepatic bile ducts where they turn into the adult worm. Released eggs go
downstream into the duodenum again and are discharged with the host faeces
closing the life cycle [67, 68].C. sinensis is well adapted to human bile ducts and is able to
colonise them with few or no symptoms at all. Most of the clinical
manifestations and, therefore, imaging findings, depend on the amount of flukes
inside the biliary tree and are due to bile duct obstruction leading to
cholangitis (oriental cholangio-hepatitis).Major complications are gallstones, stones, and casts inside dilated
bile ducts, pyogenic cholangitis, liver abscesses, cholecystitis, hepatitis, or
even cirrhosis. Pancreatic ducts can be affected in heavy infections [62-66].C. sinensis is a known risk factor for cholangiocarcinoma due to
chronic inflammation and damage of the biliary epithelium [63, 68–71]. Some authors
have also proposed additional potential associations of clonorchis with other
biliopancreatic neoplasms, for instance, pancreatic mucinous cystadenoma [72], although probably further
investigations are needed.Typical imaging findings are diffuse dilatation of peripheral
intrahepatic bile ducts where the flukes are lodged. Central intrahepatic and
extrahepatic ducts are often spared.US is used as screening technique in endemic areas. It
characteristically displays the dilated intrahepatic ducts with wall thickening
and a surrounding hyperechoic halo thought to be caused by periductal fibrosis.
The gallbladder and bile ducts can be filled with detritus and/or gallstones,
and sometimes the flukes themselves can be seen as moving echoic foci
(Fig. 10a).
Fig. 10
Clonorchiasis in a 50-year-old woman
native to China. a. Axial US image shows mild
choledocal dilatation with a non-obstructive bile stone.
b. Contrast-enhanced CT image shows dilatation of
intrahepatic bile ducts in the right lobe, with periductal
enhancement and intraluminal solid contents (debris, parasites),
including bile stones and casts (arrows). Note the
hyperaemia of the surrounding hepatic parenchyma
(asterisk), secondary to acute inflammatory
changes
Clonorchiasis in a 50-year-old woman
native to China. a. Axial US image shows mild
choledocal dilatation with a non-obstructive bile stone.
b. Contrast-enhanced CT image shows dilatation of
intrahepatic bile ducts in the right lobe, with periductal
enhancement and intraluminal solid contents (debris, parasites),
including bile stones and casts (arrows). Note the
hyperaemia of the surrounding hepatic parenchyma
(asterisk), secondary to acute inflammatory
changesCT and MR, especially cholangiographic sequences, also show the
dilated bile ducts with thickened walls. Periductal enhancement after iv
contrast injection indicates active inflammation (Fig. 10b) [68,
72–75]. MR cholangiography can show the flukes as low-signal
material within the dilated ducts. Cholangiogram has a high sensitivity in
detecting the parasites, which appear as linear or ovoid filling defects up to
10 mm [69, 76–78].Clonorchiasis can mimic other chronic inflammatory biliary processes,
namely recurrent pyogenic cholangitis and primary sclerosing cholangitis,
forcing the radiologist to be precise and correlate closely with the clinical
picture and history of the patient [77].Diagnosis is made by demonstration of the eggs in the host’s
faeces, biliary, or duodenal aspirates. Also, DNA of the fluke can be detected
in the faeces and serum antigens can be identified with ELISA tests [67, 79]. Praziquantel is the treatment of choice.
Schistosomiasis
The parasite and its cycle
Schistosomiasis is caused by six species of Schistosoma flukes, which
have the human body as definitive host. There are two major forms of
schistosomiasis: intestinal and genitourinary, but all Schistosoma species have
a similar life cycle.Schistosoma eggs are released with faeces or urine (depending if it is
an intestinal or genitourinary infection). When the eggs are discharged in water
they liberate the larvae (miracidium) which infect the intermediate host (some
species of aquatic snails) where they mature to secondary larvae (cercariae).
Cercariae leave the snails and swim to invade their final host, the human being.
They penetrate through the skin and enter blood and lymphatic vessels where they
become schistosomulae and lodge finally in the liver sinusoids turning into
male–female pairs to copulate. Adult worms migrate downstream to the
mesenteric and rectal venules (intestinal schistosomiasis) or to the pelvic and
paravesical venous plexus (genitourinary schistosomiasis), where they live and
produce eggs [80]. Eggs migrate through
the bowel o urinary bladder wall and are discharged with the stools or urine
closing the cycle.
Intestinal schistosomiasis
Human infection
The main causes are S. mansoni (Central Africa, Middle East, the
Caribbean, and South America) and S. japonicum (China, the Philippines, and
South East Asia). The rest of species have very limited incidence. Infection is
more prevalent and intense in children and most of the cases (90 %) take
place in Africa [80].Clinical picture depends on the stage of the disease. When cercariae
penetrate the skin they can cause dermatitis (“swimmer’s
itch” or “lake itch”). The migration and maturation of
the schistosomulae may produce a systemic inflammatory reaction
(“Katayama fever”) with flu-like symptoms, hepatosplenomegaly,
and eosinophilia. When adult worms lodge in the mesenteric venules they can
cause colitis and iron-deficiency anaemia. Symptomatology can be subtle though,
and individuals can remain nearly asymptomatic [80]. Some schistosoma eggs are trapped in portal venules causing a
granulomatous reaction and periportal hepatic fibrosis with relative sparing of
liver acinar architecture in contrast with viral cirrhosis. [81-83].It has been suggested that the chronic hepatic injury caused by
schistosomiasis may enhance the liver damage in patients with chronic viral
hepatitis and, therefore, be a potential cofactor for the development of
hepatocellular carcinoma [84].Most of the imaging findings are actually due to the chronic hepatic
affection and its related complications such as portal hypertension.US can display periportal fibrosis as echogenic cuffing around the
portal branches. The presence of peripheral hepatic vessels is also
characteristic. US can also reflect the typical imaging findings shared with
other chronic hepatopathies such as irregular liver surface, heterogeneous
parenchyma, or caudate and left lobe hypertrophy with right atrophy
(Fig. 11a). Portal
hypertension if present can manifest with dilatation of the
portal-splenic-mesenteric axis, diminished portal velocity or even hepatofugal
flow, or splenomegaly [85-88].
Fig.
11
Intestinal schistosomiasis. a.
US-Doppler axial image from a Filipino patient with chronic
infection by S. japonicum. Note also the stigmata of chronic liver
disease (caudate and left lobes hypertrophy, heterogeneous
parenchyma and irregular surface). Periportal fibrosis appears as
echogenic cuffing around portal vessels (arrows),
note left portal vein (asterisk). Characteristic
fibrotic septa are seen perpendicular to the surface
(arrowheads). b. Unenhanced CT
image with iodinated oral contrast from the same patient as in
figure a. It shows fibrosis with calcified septa (“turtle
back” appearance) in the right liver lobe
(arrows). Note also the imaging findings
consistent with chronic liver disease (atrophy of the right liver
lobe with hypertrophy of the left and caudate lobes).
c. A month later the patient from figures a and b
came to the ER with acute abdominal pain; unenhanced CT with
iodinated oral contrast was performed, showing a perforated duodenal
ulcer with oral contrast leakage (arrowhead),
microbiological and pathological exams probed that it was a duodenal
ulcer caused by S. japonicum. d. Gadolinium-enhanced
axial T1-weighted MR image with fat suppression of a patient from
Guinea-Conakry with chronic S. mansoni infection, it shows almost
complete atrophy of the left portal vein and periportal fibrosis,
seen as a hypointense periportal cuffing
(arrow)
Intestinal schistosomiasis. a.
US-Doppler axial image from a Filipino patient with chronic
infection by S. japonicum. Note also the stigmata of chronic liver
disease (caudate and left lobes hypertrophy, heterogeneous
parenchyma and irregular surface). Periportal fibrosis appears as
echogenic cuffing around portal vessels (arrows),
note left portal vein (asterisk). Characteristic
fibrotic septa are seen perpendicular to the surface
(arrowheads). b. Unenhanced CT
image with iodinated oral contrast from the same patient as in
figure a. It shows fibrosis with calcified septa (“turtle
back” appearance) in the right liver lobe
(arrows). Note also the imaging findings
consistent with chronic liver disease (atrophy of the right liver
lobe with hypertrophy of the left and caudate lobes).
c. A month later the patient from figures a and b
came to the ER with acute abdominal pain; unenhanced CT with
iodinated oral contrast was performed, showing a perforated duodenal
ulcer with oral contrast leakage (arrowhead),
microbiological and pathological exams probed that it was a duodenal
ulcer caused by S. japonicum. d. Gadolinium-enhanced
axial T1-weighted MR image with fat suppression of a patient from
Guinea-Conakry with chronic S. mansoni infection, it shows almost
complete atrophy of the left portal vein and periportal fibrosis,
seen as a hypointense periportal cuffing
(arrow)S. japonicum chronic hepatic infection has a characteristic pattern
of macroscopic fibrotic septa that reach liver surface and appear in the US as
hyperechoic bands sometimes calcified (“mosaic-like” pattern;
Fig. 11a) [87].CT can also display the typical findings of a chronic hepatopathy and
portal hypertension. Periportal fibrosis appears as hypoattenuating bands around
portal branches that can enhance after iv infusion of iodinated contrast. The
characteristic pattern of septal fibrosis seen in S. japonicum shows partially
calcified hepatic septa that reach perpendicularly the liver capsule
(“turtle back” appearance; Fig. 11b-c) [85,
89].MR imaging of chronic hepatic schistosomiasis shows periportal cuffing
with high signal on T2WI and iso to hypointense on T1WI Fig. 11d. MR can also show fat hypertrophy
around the hepatic hilum and gallbladder fossa with intrahepatic extension of
the fat. Chronic hepatopathy and portal hypertension features can also be seen
[82, 90, 91]. The
fibrotic septa of S. japonicum are hypointense on T1WI and hyperintense on T2WI
[4].Acute schistosomiasis is rarely seen in imaging. Some authors have
described hepatomegaly with multiple nodules, hypoattenuating on CT, hypointense
on T1WI, and hyperintense on T2WI, apparently corresponding to granulomata
[92, 93].
Genitourinary schistosomiasis
Caused by S. haematobium, which is endemic in areas of sub-Saharan
Africa, Egypt, and the Middle East. In recent years some cases have been
reported in Corsica, and intermediate snail hosts have also been found in other
Mediterranean regions of Europe although non-infected with schistosoma. This
poses a potential risk of future expansion of urinary schistosomiasis [94, 95].Eggs trigger a granulomatous inflammatory reaction in the bladder and
distal ureter walls, causing urothelial proliferation and metaplasia (cystitis
cystica, ureteritis cystica, and cystitis glandularis), which eventually ends in
fibrosis and calcification that can cause urinary obstruction [96].Typical clinical manifestations are haematuria and cystitis-like
symptoms. Urinary lithiasis and bacterial superinfection are potential
complications.Plain radiographs or CT can demonstrate linear calcifications mainly
in the walls of the bladder and distal ureters. A totally calcified bladder
resembling a foetus head in the pelvis is pathognomonic of chronic urinary
schistosomiasis (Fig. 12a). The
degree of calcification correlates with the number of eggs in the tissue.
Fig. 12
Genitourinary schitosomiasis.
a. Pelvis radiograph of a patient born in Ivory
Coast, showing a complete calcification of the urinary bladder walls
(arrows), pathognomonic of chronic urinary
schistosomiasis. b. Pelvis radiograph from an iv
urography in a patient born in Mali; there is wall calcification of
both distal ureters (white arrows) and anterior
urinary bladder wall (black arrow), and also
calcification of the seminal vesicles (arrowheads),
consistent with chronic schistosomiasis. Cystoscopy was performed in
both patients revealing characteristic urothelial lesions. Biopsies
showed schistosoma eggs
Genitourinary schitosomiasis.
a. Pelvis radiograph of a patient born in Ivory
Coast, showing a complete calcification of the urinary bladder walls
(arrows), pathognomonic of chronic urinary
schistosomiasis. b. Pelvis radiograph from an iv
urography in a patient born in Mali; there is wall calcification of
both distal ureters (white arrows) and anterior
urinary bladder wall (black arrow), and also
calcification of the seminal vesicles (arrowheads),
consistent with chronic schistosomiasis. Cystoscopy was performed in
both patients revealing characteristic urothelial lesions. Biopsies
showed schistosoma eggsLess frequently, other genitourinary structures such as the urethra,
prostate, seminal vesicles, vasa deferentia, or even vagina and testicles, can
also be affected by egg deposition (Fig. 12b).CT detects smaller and earlier calcifications. Cystitis cystica,
ureteritis cystica, and cystitis glandularis appear as intraluminal polypoid
filling defects inside the urinary tract. Vesicoureteral reflux and urinary
obstruction can appear in long-standing cases [96, 97].US can show earlier changes in the bladder wall, such as irregular
wall thickening and polypoid lesions that can mimic carcinoma [80].Urinary schistosomiasis is a risk factor for squamous cell carcinoma
due to the chronic harm in the urothelium and squamous metaplasia. In endemic
areas squamous carcinoma represents more than 50 % of bladder
malignancies [98].Diagnosis is made by detection of the eggs in faeces, urine, or
affected tissues. Antigens and antibodies in serum or urine can help staging the
infection. DNA of the fluke can be found in sera and faeces with PCR [80]. Treatment is praziquantel.
Fascioliasis
It is caused by two species of Fasciola fluke, F. hepatica, and F.
gigantica. Fasciolaliasis is a major veterinary and health problem in developing
areas of the Andean region (mainly Bolivia, Peru, and Ecuador), the Caribbean
(Cuba and Puerto Rico), Northern Africa (principally Egypt), and Iran and the
Caspian Sea region. There are also areas of higher incidence of fascioliasis in
Europe, including Western Europe (Portugal, France, Spain, and Britain), Turkey
and the former USSR [79, 99].Adult flukes live in the biliary tract of its definitive hosts
(herbivorous mammals such as cattle, sheep, and goats) and need an intermediate
host to complete its life cycle (some species of freshwater snails). Humans can
be definitive hosts.Eggs are released with the definitive host faeces. In contact with
water they liberate miracidiae that infect the snails. Snails release cercariae
that remain encysted (metacercariae) in aquatic plants (e.g. watercress, corn
salad, algae, or mint). Humans become infected by eating vegetables with
metacercariae or freshwater containing cercariae. Metacercariae release juvenile
flukes in the duodenum, which migrate towards the liver crossing the duodenal
wall and the peritoneal cavity. Once in the liver the flukes move through the
parenchyma searching the large intrahepatic bile ducts which are the permanent
residence of the adult forms.Liver infection (hepatic phase) typically causes hepatitis-like
symptoms, urticarial and eosinophilia. Eggs are released with the bile and are
expulsed with the stool closing the cycle. Biliary tree infection (ductal phase)
can cause right upper quadrant pain and cholestasis. Possible complications are
hepatic subcapsular haemorrhage due to the entry of the flukes, cholangitis,
hepatic abscesses, or cholecystitis, either caused by the flukes and/or
bacterial superinfection [100].The key to understanding the imaging findings is to remember the
migration route of this worm.The hepatic phase on US can range from small, subcapsular hypoechoic
lesions of ill-defined borders and tendency to converge, to more diffuse areas
of parenchymal affection and heterogeneous echogenicity that can mimic
malignancy. These lesions are the tracts of the migrating larvae. The ductal
phase can show dilatation of bile ducts with wall thickening and sometimes
tortuous shape. Solid contents in the ductal lumina or inside the gallbladder
can correspond to debris or the flukes themselves [7, 100–102].CT can show the characteristic subcapsular liver lesions of the
hepatic phase as hypoattenuating small round nodules with rim enhancement that
tend to form clusters or tract-like lesions (Fig. 13a–b). Parenchymal ill-defined areas of
low-attenuation have also been described (Fig. 13c). The ductal phase can demonstrate biliary
dilatation, duct wall enhancement, and periportal oedema. Calcifications are
rare. Hepatic abscesses characteristically have a thick hypoattenuating rim with
poor enhancement, do not tend to merge and evolve slowly, in contrast to
pyogenic or amoebic abscesses [100,
101, 103].
Fig.
13
Fascioliasis. 42-year-old woman with history
of long-term fever. a-b Axial and coronal images of
contrast enhanced-CT shows multiple subcapsular and confluent
lesions in right hepatic lobe (arrows). Some of the
lesions have a tubular shape. c. Contrast enhanced-CT
image of the same patient 3 weeks later; the lesions have
converged forming a greater ill-defined lesion with central areas
compatible with necrosis/abscess (arrows). The
patient presented with eosinophilia and positive serology for
fasciola and was treated with antiparasitic drugs. d.
Axial T1-weighted MR image without contrast a month later,
demonstrating improvement of the hepatic affection, only residual
tubular and pseudonodular lesions of low signal intensity remain
(arrows)
Fascioliasis. 42-year-old woman with history
of long-term fever. a-b Axial and coronal images of
contrast enhanced-CT shows multiple subcapsular and confluent
lesions in right hepatic lobe (arrows). Some of the
lesions have a tubular shape. c. Contrast enhanced-CT
image of the same patient 3 weeks later; the lesions have
converged forming a greater ill-defined lesion with central areas
compatible with necrosis/abscess (arrows). The
patient presented with eosinophilia and positive serology for
fasciola and was treated with antiparasitic drugs. d.
Axial T1-weighted MR image without contrast a month later,
demonstrating improvement of the hepatic affection, only residual
tubular and pseudonodular lesions of low signal intensity remain
(arrows)MR can show hepatic capsular thickening with high signal on T2WI
and/or capsular enhancement. The migration paths and lesions caused by larvae in
the liver appear as subcapsular lines and nodules that tend to cluster, with
high signal intensity on T2WI and low signal on T1WI (Fig. 13d). These lesions can have
rim-enhancement after iv contrast administration. Biliary ducts dilatation is
better depicted on cholangiographic sequences. Sometimes adult worms can be seen
as low-signal-filling defects inside the central or extrahepatic bile ducts
[7, 100, 104].ERCP can also display the adult flukes as curvilinear filling defects
in the biliary ducts [4].The presence of a subcapsular hepatic haematoma with eosinophilia is
highly suspicious of either hepatic fascioliasis or polyarteritis nodosa [100].Diagnosis is confirmed by finding the fluke or eggs in the faeces,
duodenal fluid, or biopsy/surgically-obtained tissue. Also, with the detection
of antibodies in plasma or antigens in serum or stool [100]. Triclabendazol is the drug of choice [68].Radiologists can drain bigger liver lesions with US or CT guidance.
Also, diagnostic imaging tests are useful tools to evaluate the response to the
treatment.
Ascariasis
Ascaris lumbricoides is the most common helminthic infestation
affecting the human. Ascariasis strikes millions of people worldwide, especially
in tropical and subtropical areas of developing countries in Africa, Latin
America, and Asia. Children are at special risk of developing more severe
infestations [68, 105, 106].Humans are the final host. Infection starts after the ingestion of
eggs, usually in food, water, or soil contaminated with a carrier’s
faeces. Eggs hatch in the small bowel and the larvae perforate the wall entering
the portal system or lymphatics ending up in the lung, where they penetrate into
the alveoli.Pulmonary ascariasis can manifest with pneumonia or bronchitis-like
symptoms. Patients can sometimes develop Löffler syndrome, a type of
secondary eosinophilic lung disease.The larvae migrate to the airway and travel up to the larynx, where
they are swallowed and enter the digestive tract. Worms mature in the small
bowel lumen, mainly jejunum, and ileum, reaching up to 35 cm length.
After copulation, eggs are released with stools [105, 107].The adult worms living in the bowel can cause none or non-specific
symptoms such as abdominal pain or discomfort, nausea/vomiting, or diarrhoea.
Big amounts of worms can cause intestinal obstruction, especially in children
[107].Seldomly, worms can enter the biliary tree or pancreatic duct and can
cause cholangitis, cholecystitis, hepatic abscesses, or pancreatitis. Usually
biliary infestation affects the extrahepatic bile ducts. Repeated infections can
lead to recurrent pyogenic cholangitis [68, 107].Barium fluoroscopy studies and US continue to play a major role in
diagnosing and evaluating intestinal and biliary ascariasis, especially in the
developing world.Barium examination reveals the adult worms in the bowel lumen as
tubular smooth radiolucent filling defects. The head of the worm is blunt and
the rear pointed, and most of them are seen with the head pointing proximally
(Fig. 14a). Sometimes they can be seen
moving, and if both the head and tail point distally the worm is likely to be
dead or stunned by treatment. If the patient has been fasting the ascaris may
ingest the barium and appear filled with the oral contrast (Fig. 14b) [107].
Fig. 14
Ascariasis.
a. Barium fluoroscopic study of a 24-year-old woman
from Ecuador with previous history of ascariasis and presenting with
abdominal pain, diarrhoea, and anaemia. The study shows a worm
inside a jejunal loop (arrows). The faeces
examination revealed ascaris eggs and the patient was successfully
treated with mebendazole. Note that the head (blunt) of the worm
points proximally (arrowhead), as is usual in this
parasite b. Barium fluoroscopic study of a 37-year-old
male from Ecuador presenting with intermittent episodes of right
lower quadrant pain, mild vomiting, diarrhoea, and fever. Stool
parasitic study revealed ascaris eggs. The barium examination shows
intestinal worms compatible with ascaris, note that the shown worm
has swallowed barium contrast (arrows). c
and d. 29-year-old woman from Ecuador with
previous surgery of cholecystectomy, presenting with biliary
vomiting, right upper quadrant pain, and elevated liver and
cholestatic enzymes. The US examination in C displayed a long
echogenic filling defect without acoustic shadowing inside the
common bile duct (CBD) (arrows), with other
adjacent smaller filling defects compatible with gallstones and/or
debris. The ERCP in B shows a worm inside the common bile duct whose
head is introduced in the right hepatic duct
(arrows). The living worm was extracted with
ERCP and proved to be an ascaris lumbricoides
Ascariasis.
a. Barium fluoroscopic study of a 24-year-old woman
from Ecuador with previous history of ascariasis and presenting with
abdominal pain, diarrhoea, and anaemia. The study shows a worm
inside a jejunal loop (arrows). The faeces
examination revealed ascaris eggs and the patient was successfully
treated with mebendazole. Note that the head (blunt) of the worm
points proximally (arrowhead), as is usual in this
parasite b. Barium fluoroscopic study of a 37-year-old
male from Ecuador presenting with intermittent episodes of right
lower quadrant pain, mild vomiting, diarrhoea, and fever. Stool
parasitic study revealed ascaris eggs. The barium examination shows
intestinal worms compatible with ascaris, note that the shown worm
has swallowed barium contrast (arrows). c
and d. 29-year-old woman from Ecuador with
previous surgery of cholecystectomy, presenting with biliary
vomiting, right upper quadrant pain, and elevated liver and
cholestatic enzymes. The US examination in C displayed a long
echogenic filling defect without acoustic shadowing inside the
common bile duct (CBD) (arrows), with other
adjacent smaller filling defects compatible with gallstones and/or
debris. The ERCP in B shows a worm inside the common bile duct whose
head is introduced in the right hepatic duct
(arrows). The living worm was extracted with
ERCP and proved to be an ascaris lumbricoidesAlteration of the bowel wall secondary to the infestation can be
sometimes visible as slight thickened mucosal folds [107].US shows the adult worms as long echogenic filling defects without
acoustic shadowing inside the intestinal lumen. Higher resolution linear probes
can reveal more detailed anatomy of the worm. Also, as in barium studies, worms
can be seen moving in real time. Worms inside the biliary tree or pancreatic
duct are seen as inside the bowel. Gallbladder or biliary tree can show wall
enlargement and intraluminal debris related to the parasitic infection (Fig.
14c) [105, 107, 108].CT is rarely used as a diagnostic tool but ascaris can be
unexpectedly found as elongated filling defects in the lumen of the intestine
[105].MR shows the worms as T2 hypointense and T1 iso to hypointense
cylindrical filling defects inside the bowel lumen or biliary tree. MR
cholagiopancreatographic sequences can also display the worms as hypointense
tubular structures [105].Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) shows ascaris
also as tubular filling defects and can be used to remove the worms (Fig. 14d).Pulmonary ascariasis typically manifest in chest radiographs and CT
as patchy “ground glass” or alveolar infiltrates that usually
resolve within 10 days [18,
105].Direct identification of the worms in stool or microscopic
identification of the eggs in faeces. Eggs can also be identified in other
fluids such as vomitus, sputum, or bowel aspirate [105].Albendazole and mebendazole are the drugs of choice [106].
Strongyloidiasis
Strongyloides stercolaris is a worm that inhabits the small bowel of
human hosts. It occurs in the tropics and has also been reported in more
temperate climates (e.g. southern parts of North America, southern Europe, and
Britain) [109].Female parasites lay eggs in the small intestinal mucosa that soon
release microscopic larvae, which usually escape at the non-infective stage
(rhabditiform) in the faeces and develop into free-living adult worms within a
week. The free-living females produce another generation of rhabditiform larvae,
which develop into infective filariform larvae. Humans are infected by
penetration through intact skin. S. stercolaris is the only soil-transmitted
helminth infecting humans in which the worm can multiply in the free-living
stage. After penetrating the skin, the larvae are carried to the lungs, and
migrate through the alveoli to reach the bronchi. They migrate upstream the
bronchial tree and are swallowed to reach their normal habitat in the small
bowel [109, 110].The unique ability of this nematode to replicate in the human host
permits cycles of autoinfection (they may reinfect the same host by either
penetrating the perianal skin or the bowel wall) leading to chronic disease that
can last for several decades eventually resulting in massive parasitic
infestation. As ascaris lumbricoides, Strongyloides stercolaris can also trigger
an eosinophilic pneumonia (Löffler’s syndrome) [109-114].Many infections are asymptomatic. Acute infection may be associated
with coughing and wheezing, abdominal pain, and diarrhoea [109, 114]. In
chronic strongyloidiasis intestinal symptoms may be present, which are usually
vague (irregular bouts of looseness of the stools). Larva currens
(“creeping eruption”) is a characteristic, virtually
pathognomonic, skin eruption caused by the migration of larvae through the skin
during autoinfection [109].Hyperinfection syndrome is a rare complication that occurs when host
immunity is significantly and usually abruptly reduced, allowing rapid and
disseminated migration of filariform larvae into tissues. It includes severe
bloody diarrhoea, bowel inflammation with microperforations, bacterial
peritonitis, septicaemia, pulmonary exudates, haemoptysis, pleural effusion and
hypoxia, encephalitis, and even bacterial meningitis [109-116].Most patients with pulmonary symptoms of strongyloidiasis have
abnormal findings on chest radiographs [114, 117, 118]. During the phase of autoinfection,
chest radiographs or CT may show fine miliary nodules or diffuse reticular
interstitial opacities. With the development of heavier infection,
bronchopneumonia with scattered, patchy alveolar opacities, segmental opacities,
even lobar migratory opacities may be present [114, 117]. In patients with
hyperinfection syndrome the massive migration of larvae through the lungs
typically produces extensive pneumonia, pulmonary haemorrhage, and pleural
effusion (Fig. 15a). Pulmonary
cavitation and abscesses can occur usually due to secondary bacterial infection
[114, 115].
Fig.
15
Strongyloidiasis. a. Chest CT
image of an inmunocompromised 45-year-old patient presenting with a
severe hyperinfection syndrome. The scan shows bilateral widespread
pulmonary infiltrates and pleural effusion
(asterisks). b. Contrast-enhanced
CT image from the same patient as in a. The
patient’s condition worsened after a week and the CT scan
showed wall oedema in several bowel loops
(arrowheads). Strongyolides larvae were found
in the faeces and in bronchial aspirate
When malabsorption is present the radiographic findings are similar
to those of tropical sprue, including increased diameter of the small bowel
lumen, generalized hypotonia, and wall oedema (Fig. 15b) [110,
112, 114].Strongyloidiasis. a. Chest CT
image of an inmunocompromised 45-year-old patient presenting with a
severe hyperinfection syndrome. The scan shows bilateral widespread
pulmonary infiltrates and pleural effusion
(asterisks). b. Contrast-enhanced
CT image from the same patient as in a. The
patient’s condition worsened after a week and the CT scan
showed wall oedema in several bowel loops
(arrowheads). Strongyolides larvae were found
in the faeces and in bronchial aspirateDiagnosis of strongyloidiasis is notoriously difficult. Direct stool
microscopy, stool culture, duodenal biopsy, and serological tests (e.g. ELISA)
may be useful. However, despite all these techniques, diagnosis may remain in
doubt and clinical features should remain part of the diagnostic process. High
eosinophilia, unexplained diarrhoea and a typical larva currens rash are all
highly suggestive in risk subjects. Ivermectin is generally regarded as the most
effective therapy [109, 119].
Dracunculiasis
Guinea worm disease or dracunculiasis is a subcutaneous disease
caused by Dracunculus medinensis. Eradication programs have successfully reduced
the incidence and prevalence of this disease and it is now confined to a few
sub-Saharan African regions. In 2015 only 22 cases of dracunculiasis were
reported [120-122].Dracunculiasis is transmitted to humans through drinking water
contaminated with cyclops, a copepod (water flea) that acts as intermediate host
and carries larvae of the worm. About a year after a person has become infected,
adult female worms emerge from the skin (usually one to three emerge
simultaneously). If the emerging worms make contact with water, they expel
larvae into the water, which the copepods ingest, beginning the cycle anew
[120, 123].Developing worms do not usually cause symptoms, but as Guinea worms
emerge, they cause burning pain and may provoke allergic responses including
urticaria or even asthma. Abscess formation due to bacterial superinfection is
common. It usually affects legs and feet. Worms migrating near a joint sometimes
cause arthritis with joint effusion [109, 124].Dead calcified worms can be seen, many times incidentally, as soft
tissue “worm-like” calcifications on radiographs or CT
(Fig. 16).
Fig. 16
Dracunculiasis. a and
b Plain radiographs of the left knee and leg of a
patient coming from Mali shows “worm-like”
calcifications in the soft tissues caused by dead calcified worms.
c. CT image of the left leg of the same patient as
in a and b, confirms the dead calcified
worms in the subcutaneous tissue and muscles of the left lower
limb
Dracunculiasis. a and
b Plain radiographs of the left knee and leg of a
patient coming from Mali shows “worm-like”
calcifications in the soft tissues caused by dead calcified worms.
c. CT image of the left leg of the same patient as
in a and b, confirms the dead calcified
worms in the subcutaneous tissue and muscles of the left lower
limbDiagnosis is mainly clinical. The traditional method to discharge the
larvae is to tie the end of the emerging worm to a stick and wind the worm out
slowly. There is no effective anthelmintic agent. Provision of a safe drinking
water supply is the key to fighting this disease [109, 120, 125].
Anisakiasis
Anisakiasis is caused by the consumption of raw or undercooked fish
containing larvae of the anisakis worm.Anisakis species have a complex life cycle with several intermediate
hosts (different species of crustaceans, fish, or squid), and a final host,
which are big sea mammals (whales, dolphins, or seals). Humans are accidental
hosts of the parasite. Anisakiasis has a higher incidence in areas where raw,
marinated, or pickled fish is commonly consumed, i.e. Japan, Korea, Latin
America, and Europe (in particular Scandinavia, the Netherlands, Spain, France,
and Britain) [126, 127].After ingested, anisakis larvae stuck on the wall of the human
gastrointestinal tract unable to penetrate it. Depending on the site where the
larvae attach, anisakiasis can be divided into gastric, intestinal, and ectopic,
the latter uncommon [128, 129]. Stuck anisakis larvae cause direct
tissue damage in the bowel wall and trigger an inflammatory and allergic
reaction leading to the formation of eosinophilic granulomata. Ulceration and
perforation of the wall can also occur [126, 130].Gastric anisakiasis is more common than small or large bowel
anisakiasis [128, 131], and acute abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, and
fever are its major symptoms [128,
132]. Intestinal anisakiasis can
manifest with abdominal pain, diarrhoea, peritoneal irritation, ileus of the
small bowel, or even bowel obstruction. Intestinal anisakiasis of the distal
ileum can mimic acute appendicitis or Crohn’s disease [130, 133]. An acute systemic IgE-mediated allergic reaction may occur as
well, including anaphylaxis [126].US and CT are useful techniques to suggest the diagnosis of
intestinal anisakiasis, which is often clinically under-recognised due to the
long interval (commonly 1 week) from the intake of contaminated food to
the onset of symptoms. This differs from gastric anisakiasis, which develops
symptoms a few hours after the ingestion of the larvae [131].Typical US and CT findings of gastrointestinal anisakiasis are severe
submucosal oedema of the involved segment of the gastrointestinal tract and
ascites [126, 132, 134]. US
typically shows marked oedema of Kerckring’s folds, which is known as
“the corn” sign (Fig. 17) [128, 135].
Fig.
17
Anisakiasis. 44-year-old woman presenting with
severe abdominal pain four days after having eaten raw fish.
a. US scan axial image, concentric wall thickening
in several jejunal and ileal loops and ascites
(arrow) were seen. Note the irregularity of the
lumen surface due to oedema of Kerckring’s folds
(“the corn” sign) (arrowheads).
b. Contrast-enhanced CT of the same patient as in
a shows diffuse concentric wall thickening of a
jejunal loop (arrows) and ascites
(asterisk). The patient had positive test
results for specific IgE anti-anisakidae
antibodies
Anisakiasis. 44-year-old woman presenting with
severe abdominal pain four days after having eaten raw fish.
a. US scan axial image, concentric wall thickening
in several jejunal and ileal loops and ascites
(arrow) were seen. Note the irregularity of the
lumen surface due to oedema of Kerckring’s folds
(“the corn” sign) (arrowheads).
b. Contrast-enhanced CT of the same patient as in
a shows diffuse concentric wall thickening of a
jejunal loop (arrows) and ascites
(asterisk). The patient had positive test
results for specific IgE anti-anisakidae
antibodiesIn gastric anisakiasis, the anisakis larvae are frequently found on
endoscopy attached to the stomach wall [128]. In contrast, in intestinal anisakiasis, the diagnosis is
commonly made with a combination of clinical history, the positive results for
anti-anisakidae antibody and the presence of the characteristic intestinal
lesions on imaging techniques (Fig. 17)
[126, 128].The treatment of gastric anisakiasis is either endoscopic removal of
the parasites or conservative management. Intestinal anisakiasis is generally
treated with conservative management. However, there have been cases of
strangulation or severe long segmental stenosis of the intestine caused by
anisakis, which required surgical treatment [128, 134, 136–138].
Conclusions
Parasitic diseases are seldom encountered in our daily practice in
Europe, but we should keep them in mind and be familiar with their main imaging
findings, especially in the adequate clinical context, as they are emerging
conditions due to immigration from endemic areas and also some of them are still
endemic in certain European regions. It is our mission as radiologists to recognise
these diseases and raise the suspicion in order to promptly diagnose and manage
them.
Authors: Eun Mi Kim; Hyeon Je Cho; Chong Rae Cho; Yee Gyung Kwak; Mi Young Kim; Yun Ku Cho Journal: Am J Trop Med Hyg Date: 2010-12 Impact factor: 2.345
Authors: G P Teitelbaum; R J Otto; M Lin; A T Watanabe; M A Stull; H J Manz; W G Bradley Journal: AJR Am J Roentgenol Date: 1989-10 Impact factor: 3.959
Authors: David U Olveda; Remigio M Olveda; Alfred K Lam; Thao N P Chau; Yuesheng Li; Angelo Don Gisparil; Allen G P Ross Journal: Clin Microbiol Date: 2014-04-15
Authors: Pablo Rodríguez Carnero; Paula Hernández Mateo; Susana Martín-Garre; Ángela García Pérez; Lourdes Del Campo Journal: Insights Imaging Date: 2016-11-23