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Nervous System
CNS Diseases Caused by Helminths and Arthropods
Cestodes Causing CNS Disease
Coenurosis
Cysticercosis
Echinococcosis
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Sections in Veterinary Professionals
  • Behavior
  • Circulatory System
  • Clinical Pathology and Procedures
  • Digestive System
  • Emergency Medicine and Critical Care
  • Endocrine System
  • Exotic and Laboratory Animals
  • Eye and Ear
  • Generalized Conditions
  • Immune System
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  • Management and Nutrition
  • Metabolic Disorders
  • Musculoskeletal System
  • Nervous System
  • Pharmacology
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  • Reproductive System
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  • Urinary System
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Chapters in Nervous System
  • Nervous System Introduction
  • Congenital and Inherited Anomalies of the Nervous System
  • Demyelinating Disorders
  • Diseases of the Peripheral Nerve and Neuromuscular Junction
  • Diseases of the Spinal Column and Cord
  • Dysautonomia
  • Facial Paralysis
  • Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy
  • Limb Paralysis
  • Meningitis, Encephalitis, and Encephalomyelitis
  • Motion Sickness
  • Neoplasia of the Nervous System
  • Paraneoplastic Disorders of the Nervous System
  • Polioencephalomalacia
  • Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy
  • Chronic Wasting Disease
  • Scrapie
  • Equine Viral Encephalomyelitis
  • Louping Ill
  • Pseudorabies
  • Rabies
  • Teschovirus Encephalomyelitis
  • Sporadic Bovine Encephalomyelitis
  • Equine Protozoal Myeloencephalitis
  • CNS Diseases Caused by Helminths and Arthropods
  • Tick Paralysis
Topics in CNS Diseases Caused by Helminths and Arthropods
  • Overview of CNS Diseases Caused by Helminths and Arthropods
  • Cestodes Causing CNS Disease
  • Trematodes Causing CNS Disease
  • Nematodes Causing CNS Disease
  • Arthropods Causing CNS Disease
     
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    Cestodes Causing CNS Disease

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    Coenurosis

    Taenia multiceps multiceps is an intestinal parasite of canids (especially dogs, foxes, and jackals) and humans. Its intermediate hosts include sheep, goats, deer, antelope, chamois, rabbits, hares, horses, and less commonly cattle, which acquire the eggs while grazing. Some oncospheres reach the brain and develop by endogenous budding into a metacestode (larval) stage known as Coenurus cerebralis. Initial invasion and development of the oncospheres may be responsible for acute suppurative meningoencephalitis. The fully developed coenurus may be 5–6 cm in diameter and cause increased intracranial pressure, which results in ataxia, hypermetria, blindness, head deviation, stumbling, and paralysis. This clinical condition is known as gid, sturdy, or staggers. In sheep, palpation of the skull caudal to the horn buds may reveal refraction; surgery to remove the cyst, including its wall, has a reasonable chance of success and is justified in valuable animals. Dogs associated with sheep and other livestock should not be fed the brain or spinal cord from infected animals and should be dewormed regularly.

    Cysticercosis

    Taenia solium is a tapeworm found in the small intestine of humans. Its metacestode (larval) stage, a cysticercus, is a large fluid-filled cavity or vesicle or bladder found in the musculature of pigs. This larval stage was once regarded as a separate parasite, and it still retains the scientific name Cysticercus cellulosae. In humans, this larval stage may also develop in subcutaneous sites and musculature but may be found in nervous tissues, eg, the brain and ocular tissues. Infection in humans stems from ingestion of tapeworm eggs in contaminated foods or from dirty hands. In the brain, the parasite usually develops in the ventricles and becomes proliferative. Infection causes pain, paralysis, epileptiform seizures, locomotor disturbances, and possibly death. The coenuri commonly localize on the meninges and in the neuropil. Treatment of human cysticercosis is by surgical removal of the lesion; however, the prognosis is not good.

    Echinococcosis

    Echinococcus granulosus is a tapeworm found in the small intestine of the canid definitive host. Its eggs are ingested by the intermediate hosts, wild and domestic herbivores, eg, sheep, cattle, and moose. Humans can also serve as intermediate hosts. After hatching in the intestine of the intermediate host, the oncospheres invade the circulatory system and lodge in various organs (the liver and lungs), where they develop into large, thick-walled, unilocular hydatid cysts that bud protoscolices endogenously. Hydatids have been rarely reported in the CNS of domestic animals and are rare in humans, in which they produce symptoms similar to those of a brain tumor.

    Foxes are the definitive host for a related species, Echinococcus multilocularis. Microtine rodents (such as voles) are the intermediate host. This parasite has been rarely found in the brain of humans, in which the invasive, thin-walled multilocular hydatid cyst do not produce scolices. Surgical intervention is more successful in removing hydatid cysts of E granulosus.

    Last full review/revision July 2011 by Charles M. Hendrix, DVM, PhD

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