Abstract

Neurocysticercosis, the commonest neuro-parasite, sometimes presents as complex ring enhancing lesion causing diagnostic dilemma. We aim to establish radio-histo-morphological equivalents of early events in degeneration of the parasite to explain such imaging phenotypes. We compared patterns of degeneration in 23 randomly selected complex NCC on MRI with histo-morphology in 30 cysts obtained from an unrelated post mortem brain. The anatomy of the parasite and the degenerative patterns of the scolex (hydropic changes, calcification, evagination, and fragmentation) and the cyst wall (undulation, accessory loculi, and frank disruption) were well demonstrated on both. The intact scolex remarkably resembled head of intestinal Taenia. The complex lesions were conglomeration of multiple communicating cysts with a single parent cyst and multiple daughter cysts. The parent cysts contained a solitary variably degenerated scolex, had thicker walls and associated chronic inflammation. The remaining cysts of the lesion complex contained no scolex, had poorly organized walls, turbid contents, and florid perilesional enhancement with leakage of contrast. Three lesions assumed a multi-cystic pseudo-tumorous pattern, of which two resolved into solitary calcific remnants on follow up. Complex lesion in NCC result from degeneration of solitary parasite with perilesional gliosis, surrounded by multiple non-larval daughter cysts inciting acute intra and perilesional inflammation due to enhanced antigenic challenge. Possibly, attempted abortive asexual reproduction by the cellulose cyst as a preterminal event results in a "limited Racemose like transition." Correct interpretation has diagnostic and therapeutic implications as active lesions and their fibrocalcific residue may have greater epileptogenic potential.

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