Abstract

Cystic hydatidosis (CH) caused by Echinococcus granulosus is an important zoonosis worldwide. Several serodiagnostic and ultrasound tests are currently used for screening asymptomatic CH. The sensitivity of the serodiagnostic tests has been demonstrated by several groups to be lower than ultrasonography (US). To explain the mechanism of the difference in sensitivity, a large-scale US survey combined with an IgG4-enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay test was conducted in Uruguay. Our results suggest that certain cyst images, e.g., multivesicular cysts, may be closely associated with a high antibody response regardless of the cyst size, whereas other hydatid lesions, e.g., solid images with/without rolled parasite membranes, have lower antibody responses with a close relationship to cyst size. Seropositivity of subjects who had been treated surgically for removal of hydatid cysts in the last 5 yr was closest to that of actual CH patients, albeit free from CH by US. These findings are important for the proper use of serodiagnostic tests and US for community-based epidemiological studies.

Full Text
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