Food Poisoning Can Go Worse To Become Neurocysticercosis

in #hive-19638724 days ago

I cannot stop repeating it that I do not like Food Poisoning but when you eat cheap public food, or do not eat food prepared following the right standard, then there is a high chance to get food poisoning but if you are the person having the poisoning, the expect everyone to understand, feel sorry and possibly help you but in the case when you are at work and someone calls in sick with the excuse that they have food poisoning, there is usually a high chance that you think the person is a Pinocchio in human form but your human nature will want to believe that there is a high chance that the person is battling with serious stomach pain and you would expect that they resume the next day. Some cases of foodborne illnesses might look like food poisoning, but hold more dire consequences than just stomach ache and continuous use of the toilet.

There was a case published in the New England Journal of Medicine about a 18 year old male who arrived at the hospital with tonic-clonic seizures which is a combination of tonic and clonic seizures where tonic seizures is happens when the muscle contracts and stiffens while clonic seizure is the twitching of one or two muscles repeatedly. So with Tonic-Clonic Seizures, the man was experiencing the stiffening of his muscles as well as the twitching of the muscles at the same time.

When the man was examined, he was confused but he had complained of pain in his groins a week before. Upon examination, he also had swelling on his right eye so in other to be sure if it was a neurological situation, an MRI was performed on his head and lesions were seen in his brain. In China, there was a report similar to this from the First Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University, where a 46 year old man was brought in after experiencing multiple seizures and headache for more than a month. with a CT scan, there was also calcification as he had multiple intracranial calcifications where calcium builds up in brain tissue and lesions inside his skull. When an MRI was done on him, the speckles on his brain were Cysts (Neurocysticercosis). Doctors were able to administer anti-inflammatory and anti-seizure medications, the Cysts was removed from his brain and intracranial pressure were reduced to keep him alive.

Both cases of lesions in their brains had cysts in their brain which is the home to Pork Tapeworm (Taenia solium) larvae. This tapeworm is usually associated with undercooked or uncooked pork meat. The terrible part of this tapeworm is that until it begins to infect the body and reproduce non-stop, it can be very difficult to confirm if they are in the body and the worst symptoms occur when the worm eggs have reached the brain.

People who house tapeworm eggs in their brain can experience multitude of symptoms including changes in behavior, intracranial pressure as a result of liquid build up in the cranial cavity, nerve and muscle impairment, and seizures. While it is a foodborne illness, it does a lot of harm compared to other foodborne illness.

According to Dr. Lee-Ann Jaykus, Anything harmful in a meat lives on the surface of meat and not inside the meat so cooking the meat will kill the harmful pathogens in them. But this is not the same for grounded or shredded meat. While you might want to eat fresh meat or fishes, it is important to refrigerate them at -4 degrees Celsius but the best way to save ourselves from any type of worm is to cook the meat up to the internal temperature of 70 degrees Celsius.



Post Reference



https://www.ctvnews.ca/health/man-suffering-from-seizures-turned-out-to-have-tapeworms-in-his-brain-1.4704601
https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMicm1810953
https://radiopaedia.org/articles/multiple-intracranial-calcifications
https://edition.cnn.com/2019/06/07/health/tapeworm-brain-trnd/index.html
https://www.cancertherapyadvisor.com/home/decision-support-in-medicine/pediatrics/cysticercosis/
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/trichinosis/symptoms-causes/syc-20378583
https://www.seafoodhealthfacts.org/safety/parasites/
https://www.merckmanuals.com/en-ca/professional/infectious-diseases/cestodes-tapeworms/taenia-solium-pork-tapeworm-infection-and-cysticercosis



Image Reference



Image 1 || Flickr || Tapeworm proglottids
Image 2 || Wikimedia Commons || Intraoperative Finding of Neurocysticercosis