Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Section 1 Health and disease
- Section 2 Mother and child health
- Section 3 Infection: general principles
- Section 4 Major common infections
- Section 5 Bacterial infections
- Section 6 Viral Infections
- Section 7 Protozoal infections
- Section 8 Helminth infections
- 46 Intestinal helminths
- 47 Schistosomiasis
- 48 Lymphatic filariasis and loa loa
- 49 Onchocerciasis
- 50 Cysticercosis
- 51 Hydatid disease
- 52 Paragonimiasis
- 53 Trichinellosis
- 54 Guinea worm
- Section 9 Fungal infections
- Section 10 Non-communicable diseases
- Section 11 Diseases of body systems
- Section 12 Cancer and Palliative Care
- Section 13 Venoms and Poisons
- Index
- References
50 - Cysticercosis
from Section 8 - Helminth infections
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Section 1 Health and disease
- Section 2 Mother and child health
- Section 3 Infection: general principles
- Section 4 Major common infections
- Section 5 Bacterial infections
- Section 6 Viral Infections
- Section 7 Protozoal infections
- Section 8 Helminth infections
- 46 Intestinal helminths
- 47 Schistosomiasis
- 48 Lymphatic filariasis and loa loa
- 49 Onchocerciasis
- 50 Cysticercosis
- 51 Hydatid disease
- 52 Paragonimiasis
- 53 Trichinellosis
- 54 Guinea worm
- Section 9 Fungal infections
- Section 10 Non-communicable diseases
- Section 11 Diseases of body systems
- Section 12 Cancer and Palliative Care
- Section 13 Venoms and Poisons
- Index
- References
Summary
Cysticercosis is not acquired through contact with pigs, nor, specifically, by eating pork. The diagnosis relies either on histology, sophisticated imaging or an immunological test – none of which is widely available in Africa. As a result, cysticercosis is not a diagnosis that is commonly made.
Life cycle
Cysticercosis is the disease caused by the ingestion of the eggs of the pig tapeworm, Taenia solium, not by eating ‘measly’ pork. Humans who eat ‘measly’ pork acquire a tape worm. People with T. solium excrete eggs in their faeces and it is ingestion of these eggs that produce cysticercosis. It is not uncommon for patients with T. solium to auto-infect – in other words, to ingest eggs shed by their own tapeworm. Once ingested, the eggs hatch in the stomach and the larvae burrow through the wall of the intestine and migrate around the body, with a particular predilection for skeletal muscle and the brain. Larvae in the brain are the cause of neurocysticercosis (NCC).
The problem in Africa
There are very few data about the prevalence of cysticercosis in Africa. Most of the published data come from the Peruvian Cysticercosis Working Group, based in Lima, whose work suggest that as much as 40 percent of adult-onset epilepsy is secondary to neurocysticercosis (Garcia et al., 2003).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Principles of Medicine in Africa , pp. 466 - 467Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2013