Intraventricular Neurocysticercosis: Comparative Analysis of Different LocalizationsClinical Course and Treatment. A Systematic Review.

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Abstract

Background Neurocysticercosis is significant due to its high prevalence and considerable morbidity and mortality. The intraventricular form of NCC is less common than parenchymal, may have a rapidly progressive course and it requires a corresponding therapeutic response. Despite the extensive literature dealing with NCC and intraventricular cystic lesions, no systematic reviews have addressed similar work related to the clinical course and treatment of the infestation. Our main objective was to analyze the clinical type of the disease and the management for each ventricle separately on the basis of case reports or series of patients with individual data on the course of the disease and its treatment. As a control group, we used data on signs&symptoms and treatment of patients from published series on intraventricular neurocysticercosis. Method We performed a search in the Medline database. Google Scholar was also randomly searched. We extracted the following data from the eligible case/series: age and gender, symptoms, clinical signs, diagnostic examinations and findings, localization, treatment, follow-up period, outcome, and publication year. All data are presented in the form of absolute and relative numbers. The frequency of signs and symptoms, treatment and outcomes of the observed groups were checked by the Chi-square test and Fisher's test. The hypothesis was tested with p <0.05 as statistical significance. Results We selected 160 cases of intraventricular neurocysticercosis (IVNCC) and divided them according to their localization into five categories. Hydrocephalus was recognized in 134 cases (83.4%). Patients with isolated IVNCCare are younger (P=.0264) and have a higher percentage of vesicular cysts (p <0.001 and p.023948). Other signs and symptoms were less frequent and statistically irrelevant. Surgical resection of the parasite was the predominant type of treatment, varying from 55.5% to 87.5% (p-.02395); endoscopy (48.2%) and craniotomy (24.4%), each individually, showed statistical significance (.00001 and.000073, respectively). The difference was also relevant among patients who had CSF diversion performance with/without medical treatment (p-.002312. Postoperatively, 31.8% of patients received anthelmintics with/without anti-inflammatory or other drugs. Endoscopy, open surgery, and postoperative antiparasitic therapy showed statistical differences (p < 0.001). Favorable outcomes or regression of symptoms were recorded in 83.7%, mortality 7.5%. In the case series, the clinical signs&symptoms were as follows: headache-64%, nausea and vomiting 48.4%, focal neurological deficit 33.6% and altered level of consciousness 25%. Open surgery was the predominant form of intervention (craniotomy (57.6% or endoscopy 31.8%); with statistical significance between them (p

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Milenkovic, Z. J., Momcilovic, S. D., Ignjatovic, A. M., Trenkic-Aracki, A., Dzopalic, T. M., Vidovic, N. T., … Tasic-Otasevic, S. A. (2022). Intraventricular Neurocysticercosis: Comparative Analysis of Different LocalizationsClinical Course and Treatment. A Systematic Review. Journal of Neurological Surgery, Part A: Central European Neurosurgery. https://doi.org/10.1055/a-2122-7391

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