DOI: 10.12809/hkmj166092
© Hong Kong Academy of Medicine. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Neurocysticercosis in a young Indian male: not
an uncommon scenario
Roosy Aulakh, MD
Department of Pediatrics, Government Medical College and Hospital,
Sector 32, Chandigarh 160030, India
Corresponding author: Dr Roosy Aulakh (drroosy@gmail.com)
To the Editor–I read with interest the case report by
Ng et al1 of a young Indian male who was diagnosed
with neurocysticercosis (NCC). The patient
presented with headache and monoparesis with no
history of fever or seizures. Magnetic resonance
imaging delineated a well-circumscribed hypointense
cystic lesion with a contrast-enhancing wall and
an eccentric intracystic signal with perilesional
oedema. Such a characteristic ring-enhancing lesion
with eccentric intracystic signal suggestive of scolex
is definitive radiological evidence of NCC as per the
absolute diagnostic criteria described by Del Brutto.2
Brain abscess, another differential considered
by the authors, seems unlikely in the absence of
fever. Malignant glioma was another consideration
but the lesion was so well demarcated it was
dismissed by the authors. In such a case of a
young male who was resident in a cysticercosis-endemic
area and who had characteristic
neuroimaging findings, therapy for NCC in the form
of steroids and cysticidal therapy was warranted.
There seems to have been no indication for
proceeding with craniotomy to excise the lesion.
In addition, the patient had no seizures, precluding
refractory epilepsy as a justification for surgical
intervention. If the entire lesion with firm capsule
was excised as stated, and in the absence of any other
documented NCC lesion or cysticercosis at any
other site such as soft tissue or muscle, there would
have been no reason to prescribe cysticidal therapy.
References
1. Ng EP, Woo PY, Wong AK, Chan KY. Neurocysticercosis in
a young Indian male. Hong Kong Med J 2016;22:399.e1-3. Crossref
2. Del Brutto OH. Diagnostic criteria for neurocysticercosis,
revisited. Pathog Glob Health 2012;106:299-304. Crossref