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1.
Rev. cuba. invest. bioméd ; 39(2): e578, abr.-jun. 2020. tab, graf
Article in Spanish | LILACS, CUMED | ID: biblio-1126601

ABSTRACT

Introducción: la meningoencefalitis eosinofílica es una enfermedad inflamatoria infecciosa reportada en Cuba desde la década de los ochenta del siglo pasado y actualmente extendida al continente americano. Es producida por el parásito Angiostrongylus cantonensis. Objetivo: determinar si existen diferencias entre los pacientes que sufrieron meningoencefalitis eosinofílica antes y después de la introducción del caracol gigante africano. Métodos: se estudiaron un total de 19 muestras de líquido cefalorraquídeo y suero tomadas simultáneamente a cada paciente diagnosticados con meningoencefalitis eosinofílica, perteneciente a la seroraquioteca del Laboratorio Central del Líquido Cefalorraquídeo (LABCEL). Para la determinación de las proteínas albúmina e IgG se empleó como método de laboratorio la inmunodifusión radial. Resultados: el 14 por ciento de los pacientes fueron adultos antes de la aparición de este molusco, en contraste con el momento actual, donde el 50 por ciento son pacientes con edades superiores a 18 años. El porcentaje de síntesis de IgG intratecal media fue mayor en los enfermos actuales, aunque no de manera significativa. Conclusiones: . existen diferencias antes y después de la aparición del caracol gigante africano dado por la respuesta de síntesis intratecal en los pacientes asociados con el molusco que denota una mayor agresividad del parásito. La edad promedio mayor de los enfermos confirma que estos son los que más manipulan y dispersan el molusco(AU)


Introduction: eosinophilic meningoencephalitis is an infectious inflammatory disease reported in Cuba since the 1980s and currently extended to the American continent. This condition is caused by the parasite Angiostrongylus cantonensis. Objective: determine whether there are differences between the patients suffering from eosinophilic meningoencephalitis before and after the introduction of the giant African snail. Methods: a study was conducted of a total 19 cerebrospinal fluid and serum samples taken simultaneously from each of the patients diagnosed with eosinophilic meningoencephalitis and kept at the sample collection of the Central Cerebrospinal Fluid Laboratory (LABCEL). Radial immunodiffusion was the laboratory method used for determination of the proteins albumin and IgG. Results: of the patients studied, 14 percent were adults before the appearance of this mollusc, in contrast with the present moment, when 50 percent are patients aged over 18 years. The percentage of mean intrathecal synthesis of IgG was higher in the current sufferers, though not significantly. Conclusions: there are differences before and after the appearance of the giant African snail, given the intrathecal synthesis response of patients associated to the mollusc, which denotes greater aggressiveness by the parasite. The higher mean age of sufferers confirms that these are the ones who most often handle and disperse the mollusc(AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Strongylida Infections/complications , Meningoencephalitis/cerebrospinal fluid , Snails/parasitology , Angiostrongylus cantonensis/pathogenicity , Laboratories
2.
Rev. cuba. invest. bioméd ; 39(1): e590, ene.-mar. 2020. graf
Article in Spanish | LILACS, CUMED | ID: biblio-1126580

ABSTRACT

Introducción: El helminto Angiostrongylus cantonensis es un parásito habitual en los pulmones de la rata y puede ocasionar meningoencefalitis eosinofílica en el hombre cuando se pone en contacto con las larvas por ingestión accidental. En Cuba es endémico y el riesgo de contraerlo aumenta con la entrada del caracol gigante africano en el país. Objetivo: Describir las acciones desarrolladas por las autoridades sanitarias locales para el control del caracol gigante africano entre 2016 y 2018 y la aparición de un paciente en 2018 con meningoencefalitis eosinofílica causada por Angiostrongylus cantonensis vinculado epidemiológicamente con la presencia de este caracol. Métodos: Se realizó un estudio cualitativo a partir de un grupo focal con el que se trabajó ante la aparición del caracol gigante africano en un área de salud del municipio San Miguel del Padrón. Se realiza una encuesta semi-estructurada. Resultados: Se trazaron las estrategias para la erradicación de la especie invasora a partir de un trabajo comunitario. Dos años después, se observa nuevamente el caracol gigante africano y un paciente con meningoencefalitis eosinofílica epidemiológicamente asociado a Angiostrongylus cantonensis. Conclusiones: Las acciones realizadas entre 2016 y 2018 resultaron ser insuficientes por el nuevo avistamiento del caracol en el área, con el agravante de encontrar un paciente con meningoencefalitis eosinofílica epidemiológicamente asociado con el molusco(AU)


Introduction: Helmint Angiostrongylus cantonensis is a natural parasite in the lungs of ratas. Ocassionally it can produced an eosinophilic meningoencephalitis in men by larvae accidental ingestion. Methods: A qualitative study was performed from a focal group by a semi-structural survey in a health area from San Miguel del Padrón municipality. Objectives: To describe the actions developed by the local sanitarian authorities for the control of African giant snails between 2016 and 2018 and the appearance of a patient suffering from eosinophilic meningoencephalitis due to Angiostrongylus cantonensis linked to the presence of this snail. Results: It has been established an eradication strategy for the elimination of this invasive species based on a community work. Two years later, it was observed again the giant African snail in the area with a patient suffering from Angiostrongylus cantonensis eosinophilic meningoencephalitis epidemiologically associated. Conclusions: The 2016 actions were not efficient due to the emerging vector and the further finding of a patient linked with the parasite(AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Snails , Introduced Species , Angiostrongylus cantonensis/pathogenicity , Evaluation Studies as Topic , Disease Eradication/methods , Meningoencephalitis/etiology , Meningoencephalitis/prevention & control
3.
Rev. cuba. invest. bioméd ; 38(4): e302, oct.-dic. 2019. graf
Article in Spanish | LILACS, CUMED | ID: biblio-1093425

ABSTRACT

El diagnóstico de la meningoencefalitis por Angiostrongylus cantonensis se establece por la presencia de las larvas del helminto en el líquido cefalorraquídeo, pero esta evidencia es muy difícil de encontrar ya que las larvas son lábiles en este medio y no se hallan con frecuencia. Debido a que en Cuba, la presencia del parásito se remonta a 1981 y este parásito es el único que puede provocar esta enfermedad en el país, se realiza una revisión con el objetivo de revisar la literatura publicada sobre el tema para acopiar toda la evidencia que ayude al diagnóstico auxiliar de meningoencefalitis eosinofílica. Se propone que el estudio de la síntesis intratecal de IgE y C3c, unido al patrón de síntesis local de IgA+IgG principalmente y de IgG1+ IgG2 resultan las más indicadas. Existen otras proteínas que pudieran auxiliar como la síntesis intratecal de C4 y en menor proporción MBL(AU)


Diagnosis of meningoencephalitis due to Angiostrongylus cantonensis is based on the presence of helminth larvae in cerebrospinal fluid, but such evidence is very hard to find, since the larvae are labile in this medium and cannot be spotted easily. Based on the fact that presence of the parasite in Cuba dates back to 1981, and this is the only agent of the disease in the country, a review was conducted with the purpose of going over the published literature about the topic and gather evidence leading to the auxiliary diagnosis of eosinophilic meningoencephalitis. The study of the intrathecal synthesis of IgE and C3c, alongside the local synthesis pattern for IgA+IgG mainly and IgG1+IgG2, are proposed as the most appropriate. Other useful proteins are the intrathecal synthesis of C4 and to a lesser extent MBL(AU)


Subject(s)
Immunoglobulin A , Angiostrongylus cantonensis , Meningoencephalitis , Chronology as Topic
5.
The Korean Journal of Parasitology ; : 713-717, 2015.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-91233

ABSTRACT

A 23-year-old female residing in a village of Cao Bang Province, North Vietnam, visited the Hospital of Hanoi Medical University in July 2013. She felt dim eyes and a bulge-sticking pain in her left eye for some days before visiting the hospital. In the hospital, a clinical examination, an eye endoscopy, and an operation were carried out. A nematode specimen was collected from the eye of this patient. The body of this worm was thin and long and measured 22.0x0.3 mm. It was morphologically suggested as an immature female worm of Angiostrongylus cantonensis. By a molecular method using 18S rRNA gene, this nematode was confirmed as A. cantonensis. This is the first molecular study for identification of A. cantonensis in Vietnam.


Subject(s)
Animals , Female , Humans , Young Adult , Angiostrongylus cantonensis/classification , Base Sequence , Eye/parasitology , Eye Diseases/diagnosis , Molecular Sequence Data , Strongylida Infections/diagnosis , Vietnam
6.
Pesqui. vet. bras ; 33(7): 890-900, jul. 2013. ilus, tab
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-683231

ABSTRACT

Salt poisoning occurs commonly in pigs by excessive intake of sodium chloride or by a period water deprivation for followed by free access to water. The objective of this work is to aggregate data from cases of salt poisoning, combining existing data in the literature and describe the main clinical and pathological features observed. We reviewed five outbreaks, one of which was carefully monitored. In three of them the intake of sodium chloride had been determined. Clinical signs were basically seizures with the lateral decubitus with paddling movements. Circling was observed in some cases. Sodium determination in muscle of and liver fragments, serum, cerebrospinal fluid and aqueous humor showed increased concentrations of this ion. There was eosinopenia characterizing increased recruitment eosinophils from the circulation into the brain. In all outbreaks eosinophil infiltration was observed in the meninges and the Virchow-Robin space of the cerebral cortex. Cortical laminar necrosis was more pronounced in the brain of pigs from one of the outbreaks in which animals were sick for six days. The combination of these two lesions characterizes the disease. The changes observed result from high concentrations of sodium in the brain causing cause edema that leads to increased intracranial pressure and decreased perfusion to the brain tissue causing diffuse ischemia and neuronal necrosis, with consequent malacia.


Intoxicação por sal ocorre comumente em suínos por ingestão excessiva de cloreto de sódio ou por privação de água por um período de tempo, seguido de um livre acesso a água abundante. O objetivo deste trabalho é agregar dados de casos de intoxicação por sal, diagnosticados, compilar dados já existentes na literatura e caracterizar as principais alterações clínicas e patológicas observadas. Foram revisados cinco surtos, sendo que um deles foi minuciosamente acompanhado. Em três deles a ingestão de cloreto de sódio foi determinada. Os sinais clínicos eram basicamente convulsões, com intensos tremores musculares e desenvolvimento de opistótono. Os animais permaneciam em decúbito lateral, fazendo movimentos de pedalagem. Alguns andavam em círculos. Dosagens de sódio em fragmentos de músculo e de fígado, no soro, líquor e humor aquoso revelaram concentrações aumentadas do íon. A quantidade de eosinófilos circulantes foi baixa caracterizando grande recrutamento dessas células para o encéfalo. Em todos os surtos foi observada infiltração de eosinófilos nas leptomeninges e no espaço de Virchow-Robin do córtex cerebral. Necrose cortical laminar foi observada mais detalhadamente em um dos surtos onde os suínos estavam doentes há seis dias. A combinação dessas duas lesões caracteriza a doença. Todas as alterações observadas podem ser explicadas pela provável patogenia da doença em que as elevadas concentrações de sódio causam edema cerebral que leva ao aumento da pressão intracraniana e decréscimo da perfusão para o cérebro causando isquemia difusa e necrose neuronal, com consequente malacia.


Subject(s)
Animals , Sodium Chloride/analysis , Sodium Chloride/poisoning , Sodium Chloride/toxicity , Poisoning/diagnosis , Poisoning/mortality , Poisoning/veterinary , Meningoencephalitis/veterinary , Swine/anatomy & histology
7.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 107(6): 740-746, set. 2012. ilus, mapas, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-649488

ABSTRACT

Angiostrongylus cantonensis is the most common aetiological agent of human eosinophilic meningoencephalitis. Following a report indicating the presence of this parasite in Brazil in 2007, the present study was undertaken to investigate the presence of A. cantonensis in the surrounding Brazilian port areas. In total, 30 ports were investigated and the following molluscs were identified: Achatina fulica, Belocaulus sp., Bradybaena similaris sp., Cyclodontina sp., Helix sp., Leptinaria sp., Melampus sp., Melanoides tuberculata, Phyllocaulis sp., Pomacea sp., Pseudoxychona sp., Rhinus sp., Sarasinula marginata, Streptaxis sp., Subulina octona, Succinea sp., Tomigerus sp., Wayampia sp. and specimens belonging to Limacidae and Orthalicinae. Digestion and sedimentation processes were performed and the sediments were examined. DNA was extracted from the obtained larvae and the internal transcribed spacer region 2 was analysed by polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism after digestion with the endonuclease ClaI. Of the 30 ports investigated in this study, 11 contained molluscs infected with A. cantonensis larvae. The set of infected species consisted of S. octona, S. marginata, A. fulica and B. similaris. A total of 36.6% of the investigated ports were positive for A. cantonensis, indicating a wide distribution of this worm. It remains uncertain when and how A. cantonensis was introduced into South America.


Subject(s)
Animals , Angiostrongylus cantonensis/isolation & purification , Disease Vectors , Mollusca/parasitology , Brazil , Mollusca/classification , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length
8.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 105(7): 938-941, Nov. 2010. ilus, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-566189

ABSTRACT

The rat lungworm Angiostrongylus cantonensis is a worldwide-distributed zoonotic nematode that can cause human eosinophilic meningoencephalitis. Here, for the first time, we report the isolation of A. cantonensis from Achatina fulica from two Brazilian states: Rio de Janeiro (specifically the municipalities of Barra do Piraí, situated at the Paraiba River Valley region and São Gonçalo, situated at the edge of Guanabara Bay) and Santa Catarina (in municipality of Joinville). The lungworms were identified by comparing morphological and morphometrical data obtained from adult worms to values obtained from experimental infections of A. cantonensis from Pernambuco, Brazil, and Akita, Japan. Only a few minor morphological differences that were determined to represent intra-specific variation were observed. This report of A. cantonensis in South and Southeast Brazil, together with the recent report of the zoonosis and parasite-infected molluscs in Northeast Brazil, provide evidence of the wide distribution of A. cantonensis in the country. The need for efforts to better understand the role of A. fulica in the transmission of meningoencephalitis in Brazil and the surveillance of molluscs and rodents, particularly in ports, is emphasized.


Subject(s)
Animals , Female , Male , Angiostrongylus cantonensis , Disease Vectors , Gastropoda , Angiostrongylus cantonensis , Angiostrongylus cantonensis , Brazil , Meningoencephalitis , Meningoencephalitis/transmission , Strongylida Infections , Strongylida Infections/transmission
9.
Rev. cuba. med. trop ; 61(1)ene.-abr. 2009. tab
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-547076

ABSTRACT

La infección por el nematodo Angiostrongylus cantonensis es la causa mßs frecuente de meningoencefalitis eosinofílica. La mayoría de los casos aparecen de forma aislada aunque se han descrito numerosos brotes epidémicos. Describir las manifestaciones clínicas y las características del líquido cefalorraquídeo y otros exámenes complementarios de 11 pacientes con diagnóstico de meningoencefalitis eosinofílica. Se trata de un estudio de serie de casos, de 11 enfermos admitidos en el Hospital General Universitario Dr Gustavo Aldereguía Lima con el diagnóstico de meningoencefalitis eosinofílica. Estos pacientes provenían de un mismo centro de trabajo, situado en un área rural, y sus síntomas clínicos coincidieron en el tiempo (enero-febrero 2006). Los síntomas predominantes fueron cefalea persistente (100 por ciento), parestesias e hiperestesias cutáneas (100 por ciento), mialgias (45 por ciento), trastornos visuales (45 por ciento), rigidez nucal (18 por ciento), parálisis facial periférica en 2 casos (18 por ciento). Solo un enfermo refirió fiebre. El diagnóstico de meningoencefalitis por A. cantonensis debe sospecharse en todo enfermo con cefalea persistente, parestesias e hiperestesias, aun en ausencia de fiebre y rigidez nucal. La presencia de eosinofilia en sangre periférica asociada a los síntomas anteriores sugiere el diagnóstico. La pleocitosis con un porcentaje elevado de eosinófilos es característico de esta enfermedad, pero la ausencia de eosinófilos en el líquido cefalorraquídeo no niega el diagnóstico. Es frecuente que ocurra en alguna etapa un predominio de linfocitos. Con la descripción de esta serie de casos se presenta el primer reporte de un brote epidémico de meningoencefalitis eosinofílica ocurrido en Cuba.


The infection by nematode Angiostrongylus cantonensis is the most frequent cause of eosinophilic meningoencephalitis. Most of cases occur in isolation although numerous outbreaks have been described. To describe the clinical manifestations and the characteristics of the cerebrospinal fluid and other supplementary exams from 11 patients diagnosed as eosinophilic meningoencephalitis carriers. A case study of eleven patients diagnosed with eosinophilic meningoencephalitis and admitted to Dr Gustavo Aldereguía Lima general university hospital. These patients worked at the same workplace located in a rural area and their clinical symptoms appeared in the same period of time (january to february, 2006). Predominant symptoms were persistent headache (100 percent of cases 9, cutaneous paresthesia and hyperesthesia (100 percent), myalgias (45 percent), impaired vision (45 percent), neck rigidity (18 percent), peripheral facial paralysis in two cases (18 percent). One single patient said that he had got fever. Meningoencephalitis caused by A. cantonensis should be suspected whenever a person suffers from persistent headache, paresthesias and hyperesthesias, even when neither fever nor neck rigidity is declared. Eosinophilia in peripheral blood associated to previous symptoms may indicate such a diagnosis. Pleocytosis, in which the percentage of eosinophils is high, is a characteristic of this disease; however, the lack of eosinophils in the cerebrospinal fluid does not reject this diagnosis. It is frequent that at some stage, lymphocytes will be predominant. The description of this case study allows us to present the first report of an outbreak of eosinophilic meningoencephalitis occurred in Cuba.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Adult , Female , Middle Aged , Angiostrongylus cantonensis/pathogenicity , Eosinophilia/diagnosis , Eosinophilia/cerebrospinal fluid , Meningoencephalitis/diagnosis , Meningoencephalitis/cerebrospinal fluid
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