Neuroangiostrongyliasis: The "Subarachnoid Phase" and Its Implications for Anthelminthic Therapy

神经血管圆线虫病:“蛛网膜下腔期”及其对驱虫治疗的影响

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Abstract

Infection with the Rat Lungworm Angiostrongylus cantonensis is the leading cause of human eosinophilic meningoencephalitis worldwide. From its origins in southeastern Asia, the parasite was spread extensively throughout the twentieth century and is now established in many of the world's warmer regions. Its clinical effects range from mild and transient symptoms, usually headache with peripheral nerve dysfunction, to severe and permanent central nervous system (CNS) damage, occasionally fatal. The severity and prognosis of disease are determined by the larval dose, acquired by ingesting infected intermediate hosts (slugs and snails) or, less often, paratenic hosts, such as crabs, shrimps, frogs, and monitor lizards. Early diagnosis is critical for treatment and depends on clinical suspicion, for laboratory confirmation from blood and cerebrospinal fluid can be delayed and unreliable. Treatment is fraught with difficulty, compounded by conflicting published results. Corticosteroids play a useful role in suppressing early CNS inflammation, but their duration for maintenance becomes problematic in severe infections. Because most of the pathogenesis results from host immuno-inflammatory responses to migrating and dead larvae in the CNS, anthelminthic therapy remains controversial: if effective, it kills viable larvae, arresting them in the CNS and so exacerbating the pathology. In human infections, it is now clear that many larvae do leave the CNS and reach the pulmonary arteries, sometimes with clinical consequences. Pioneering life-cycle studies in rats demonstrated a "subarachnoid phase" in larval development and migration; recent autopsy findings, outlined here, show it also occurs in humans and has some bearing on treatment. One new and four previously reported cases of human infection are analyzed here, with findings indicating that anthelminthic treatment is effective only when given early and should not be commenced beyond 3 weeks after exposure to infection. In endemic areas, treatment should start as soon as this infection is suspected, even without a clear history of exposure, given the unacceptable risks of waiting for diagnostic laboratory confirmation.

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