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Hidden Epidemic: 
Tapeworms Living Inside People's Brains
Discover ^ | 5/15/12 | Carl Zimmer

Posted on 05/19/2012 5:44:54 PM PDT by LibWhacker

Hidden Epidemic: 
Tapeworms Living Inside People's Brains

05.15.2012

Parasitic worms leave millions of victims paralyzed, epileptic, or worse. So why isn’t anyone mobilizing to eradicate them?

by Carl Zimmer


A human brain overrun with cysts from Taenia solium, a tapeworm that normally inhabits the muscles of pigs.

Courtesy of Theodore E. Nash , M.D.

Theodore Nash sees only a few dozen patients a year in his clinic at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland. That’s pretty small as medical practices go, but what his patients lack in number they make up for in the intensity of their symptoms. Some fall into comas. Some are paralyzed down one side of their body. Others can’t walk a straight line. Still others come to Nash partially blind, or with so much fluid in their brain that they need shunts implanted to relieve the pressure. Some lose the ability to speak; many fall into violent seizures.

Underneath this panoply of symptoms is the same cause, captured in the MRI scans that Nash takes of his patients’ brains. Each brain contains one or more whitish blobs. You might guess that these are tumors. But Nash knows the blobs are not made of the patient’s own cells. They are tapeworms. Aliens.

A blob in the brain is not the image most people have when someone mentions tapeworms. These parasitic worms are best known in their adult stage, when they live in people’s intestines and their ribbon-shaped bodies can grow as long as 21 feet. But that’s just one stage in the animal’s life cycle. Before they become adults, tapeworms spend time as larvae in large cysts. And those cysts can end up in people’s brains, causing a disease known as neurocysticercosis.

“Nobody knows exactly how many people there are with it in the United States,” says Nash, who is the chief of the Gastrointestinal Parasites Section at NIH. His best estimate is 1,500 to 2,000. Worldwide, the numbers are vastly higher, though estimates on a global scale are even harder to make because neurocysticercosis is most common in poor places that lack good public-health systems. “Minimally there are 5 million cases of epilepsy from neurocysticercosis,” Nash says.

He puts a heavy emphasis on minimally. Even in developed nations, figuring out just how many people have the illness is difficult because it is easy to mistake the effects of a tapeworm for a variety of brain disorders. The clearest proof is the ghostly image of a cyst in a brain scan, along with the presence of antibodies against tapeworms.

The closer scientists look at the epidemiology of the disease, the worse it becomes. Nash and other neurocysticercosis experts have been traveling through Latin America with CT scanners and blood tests to survey populations. In one study in Peru, researchers found 37 percent of people showed signs of having been infected at some point. Earlier this spring, Nash and colleagues published a review of the scientific literature and concluded that somewhere between 11 million and 29 million people have neurocysticercosis in Latin America alone. Tapeworms are also common in other regions of the world, such as Africa and Asia. “Neurocysticercosis is a very important disease worldwide,” Nash says.

Cyst Attack 


The alarming illness occurs when tapeworm larvae lose their way. Normally, Taenia solium has a life cycle that takes it from pigs to humans and back to pigs again. Adult tapeworms, living in the intestines of humans, produce up to 50,000 eggs apiece. The eggs are shed in the infected person’s feces. Pigs swallow these eggs accidentally as they rummage for food on the ground. When the parasite eggs reach a pig’s stomach, larvae hatch and burrow their way into the animal’s bloodstream. Eventually they end up lodged in small blood vessels, typically in the animal’s muscles. There they form cysts and wait until their host is eaten by a human. (Pork has to be undercooked for the tapeworms to complete their journey.)

But sometimes tapeworms take a wrong turn. Instead of going into a pig, the eggs end up in a human. This can occur if someone shedding tapeworm eggs contaminates food that other people then eat. When the egg hatches, the confused larva does not develop into an adult in the human’s intestines. Instead, it acts as it would inside a pig. It burrows into the person’s bloodstream and gets swept through the body. Often those parasites end up in the brain, where they form cysts.

The tapeworm larvae often get stuck in ventricles, or fluid-filled cavities, in the brain, sprouting grapelike extensions. In this way the worm actively cloaks itself from immune cells. Protected and well fed, its cysts can thrive there for years.

As a tapeworm cyst grows, it may push against a region of the brain and disrupt its function. It may get stuck in a passageway, damming the flow of cerebrospinal fluid. This impasse can cause hydrocephalus, or water on the brain, along with dangerously high pressure. A resulting brain hernia can result in stupor, coma, or death.

+++

If a tapeworm cyst doesn’t cause big troubles, it may go unnoticed for its entire life. Eventually a tapeworm cyst that can’t move on to its adult stage will die; this signals the host’s immune system, eliciting a powerful attack and bringing its covert deception to an end. In many cases, the immune cells swiftly annihilate the revealed cyst, but often damage occurs. The immune system’s attack on the cyst can cause the surrounding brain tissue to swell with inflammation. For reasons unknown, a calcified cyst can keep triggering these immune reactions for years after the parasite’s death.

Although any cyst in a susceptible area of the brain can cause seizures, those lodged near regions that issue commands to muscles can trigger violent convulsions. One of Nash’s patients suffered from tapeworm cysts that twisted around his brain stem. After the tapeworms died, the inflammation that followed was so severe it put the man in a coma.

“Thirty or 40 years ago, these patients just died. Surgeons would go in and see this mess and couldn’t do much,” Nash says. Fortunately, the situation is improving. Even his comatose patient woke up and, after a few years of off-and-on treatment, completely recovered. “Now the guy is doing quite well.”

Breaking the Cycle


A great step forward came in the mid-1980s when praziquantel, the first drug able to kill tapeworm larvae in the brain, became widely available. But praziquantel proved too effective. It not only kills tapeworms but also triggers an immune reaction that causes brain swelling. “Paradoxically, we produce the disease we want to treat,” Nash says.

Over the years Nash and others refined the treatment by combining praziquantel with other drugs that tamp down the immune system. It is far from a perfect solution, though. Sometimes the immune system still overreacts, requiring years of care for seizures and other symptoms. And immune-suppressant drugs like steroids have side effects of their own.

The hunt for better drugs to fight neurocysticercosis is not an easy process. The best way to test potential medicines on tapeworms is to get living cysts out of infected pigs. Nash and his colleagues recently set up a lab in Peru, where infected pigs are abundant, to do just that.

Although finding a better cure is important, Nash is more interested in preventing tapeworms from getting into human brains in the first place by breaking their life cycle. A favored strategy is identifying people who have adult tapeworms in their bodies and giving them drugs to kill the parasites. It is also possible to vaccinate pigs so that they destroy tapeworm eggs as soon as they ingest them.

None of this is rocket science—which makes Nash all the more frustrated that so little is being done. “I see this as a disease that can be treated and prevented,” he says. But there are precious few resources available for treatment and little recognition of the problem. “All of this seems to be very feasible, but nobody wants to do anything about it.”



TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: brains; donotwant; epidemic; hidden; tapeworms; wereallgonnadie
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To: Mortrey

No rats either.


81 posted on 05/20/2012 12:13:51 AM PDT by Conservative4Ever (Waiting for the new tagline to download)
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To: LibWhacker
This study was sponsored by a new Super Pac, ‘Bacon Haters For America”.
82 posted on 05/20/2012 12:20:20 AM PDT by Kickass Conservative (A day without Obama is like a day without a Tsunami.)
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To: Uncle Ike

Two Zombies go into a bar......


83 posted on 05/20/2012 12:22:57 AM PDT by woofie (It takes three villages and a forest of woodland creatures to raise a child in Obamaville)
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To: Scythian

(( ping ))


84 posted on 05/20/2012 12:25:39 AM PDT by Lancey Howard
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To: woofie
>”Two Zombies go into a bar”<

After getting off the Obama for President Bus.

85 posted on 05/20/2012 12:35:33 AM PDT by Kickass Conservative (A day without Obama is like a day without a Tsunami.)
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To: All

Quick everyone! Grab a sledge hammer and bash your head in!
We must stop this NOW!!!!!!!!!
Don’t stop until............ow-————ow________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________


86 posted on 05/20/2012 12:36:45 AM PDT by right way right (What's it gonna take?)
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To: HiTech RedNeck
modern sanitation practice in the US, especially by the obama reelection committee, would seem to make it impossible.
87 posted on 05/20/2012 12:59:59 AM PDT by bigheadfred (MY PET TAPEWORM OBIWAN IS AN INSANE MILITARY HATING LEFTIST)
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To: right way right; chesty_puller
Quick everyone! Grab a sledge hammer and bash your head in!

Dagnubit. chesty started with his nuts.... We must stop this NOW!!!!!!!!!

Or just move to Sweden.

88 posted on 05/20/2012 1:08:40 AM PDT by bigheadfred (MY PET TAPEWORM OBIWAN IS AN INSANE MILITARY HATING LEFTIST)
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To: little jeremiah

According to some here “Veganism is vanity and conceit.”

Is that true? I doubt it, but some were very adamant about it.


89 posted on 05/20/2012 1:41:53 AM PDT by stuartcr ("When silence speaks, it speaks only to those that have already decided what they want to hear.")
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To: Charles Martel
I was just thinking of that very same joke; I think I first heard it in the late 1960s. About when did you first hear it from your Dad?

I remember it like it was just last week, it was the summer of 1968, and Dad and I were just hanging around in his wood working area of the basement, and for extra effect, he actually had a great big claw hammer in his hand when he got to the punchline and slammed it on the bench, I almost crapped myself, LOL (*thanks* Dad, that was one hilarious story! :)
90 posted on 05/20/2012 4:45:32 AM PDT by mkjessup (Romney is to conservatism what Helen Thomas is to a high fashion model walkway.)
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To: LibWhacker
Lol, nicely captures the parasite’s mind.

One could easily imagine using the same technique to rid our political system of leftists and liberals, LOL
91 posted on 05/20/2012 4:46:30 AM PDT by mkjessup (Romney is to conservatism what Helen Thomas is to a high fashion model walkway.)
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To: gura
Only 3 letters truly apply to that story, and they are OMG...!!!
92 posted on 05/20/2012 4:49:15 AM PDT by mkjessup (Romney is to conservatism what Helen Thomas is to a high fashion model walkway.)
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To: Oratam; Charles Martel
Heard it over 30 years ago from my uncle. His version ended ‘”What? No bread?” Wham!’

Amazing how stories like this take on a life of their own (kinda like a tapeworm lol) with different twists and turns and punchlines ... thanks for sharing that!
93 posted on 05/20/2012 4:51:22 AM PDT by mkjessup (Romney is to conservatism what Helen Thomas is to a high fashion model walkway.)
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To: LibWhacker

Free brain check for OWS participants...?


94 posted on 05/20/2012 4:51:33 AM PDT by Leep (Enemy of the Statist)
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To: Fractal Trader

I’m sure the diagnosis has some *wiggle room*.


95 posted on 05/20/2012 7:09:04 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (FReepathon 2Q time -- https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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To: ladyjane
When you eat the poorly cooked meat you eat the cyst with the larva and it developes into the adult worm. When you eat the egg it hatches out, migrates through the body to form the cyst. It is the migration to the brain that is the most damaging. Once you get the adult tapeworm in your GI tract and you don't wash you hands you eat more eggs thus more migrating larva that form the cysts.
96 posted on 05/20/2012 10:57:23 AM PDT by pterional
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To: HereInTheHeartland
"I don't want to eat pig meat people; I'm not a cannibal."

heh heh heh ...nice one!

97 posted on 05/20/2012 1:41:34 PM PDT by blasater1960 (Deut 30, Psalm 111...the Torah and the Law, is attainable past, present and forever.)
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To: blasater1960

“Dont eat pig meat people...”

What do pig meat people look like?


98 posted on 05/20/2012 1:53:50 PM PDT by Nik Naym (It's not my fault... I have compulsive smartass disorder.)
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To: LibWhacker
..."the principle way, one becomes infected"

Yes, but also food preparation is becoming an issue. Pig eaters should make sure that when they handle the raw meat that they wash up very good. You can easily transmit MRSA to the nose where it typically thrives and waits for an opportunity..

99 posted on 05/20/2012 1:56:54 PM PDT by blasater1960 (Deut 30, Psalm 111...the Torah and the Law, is attainable past, present and forever.)
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To: Delta 21

“...Jagerschitzel.”

Um, I think you might want to re check the spelling. LOL


100 posted on 05/20/2012 1:58:20 PM PDT by Nik Naym (It's not my fault... I have compulsive smartass disorder.)
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