Human cysticercosis in Portugal: long gone or still contemporary?


Autoria(s): Vilhena, Manuela; Fonseca, Ana Glória; Dias, Sara; Marques da Silva, José Rafael; Torgal, Jorge
Data(s)

27/01/2017

27/01/2017

04/10/2016

04/10/2019

Resumo

Cysticercosis, a leading cause of acquired epilepsy in developing countries, has been controlled or eradicated in industrialized countries. This paradigm has recently been challenged, with human neurocysticercosis (NCC) being increasingly diagnosed in these countries. In order to assess the NCC burden in Portugal, a retrospective study on NCC hospitalizations (2006–2013) was conducted based on the national database on hospital morbidity: 357 hospitalized cases were detected. NCC was most frequent in the following age groups: 20–64 years (n = 197, 55·2%) >64 years (n = 111, 31·1%), and <20 years (n = 49, 13·7%). In the Norte and Centro regions cases tended to be older than in the Lisboa and Vale do Tejo Region. The results raise concerns for imported and autochthonous disease, suggesting the Lisboa and Vale do Tejo Region, due to its higher frequency of cases at younger ages, as a priority for research and intervention, and further suggest that NCC should be under surveillance (notifiable). The National Observatory of Cysticercosis and Taeniasis has been established and will define NCC cases as well as monitoring and surveillance.

Identificador

Published online: 04 October 2016, pp. 329-333

https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/epidemiology-and-infection/issue/C9E62014EC61635BD0F5C4E30D6D8C41

http://hdl.handle.net/10174/20109

mmcv@uevora.pt

anagloriafonseca@gmail.com

sara.dias@ipleiria.pt

jmsilva@uevora.pt

jorgetorgal.spub@fcm.unl.pt

239

doi:10.1017/S0950268816002284

Idioma(s)

por

Publicador

Epidemiology & Infection Published online: 04 October 2016, pp. 329-333

Direitos

openAccess

Palavras-Chave #cysticercosis #Portugal #Surveillance
Tipo

article