Purpose: To examine whether all the histopathologically seen features of cysticercus cysts excised from brain of swine naturally infected with neurocysticercosis during its evolution are actually visible on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
Materials and methods: Five swine naturally infected with cerebral cysticercosis were subjected to fast spin-echo (SE) T2, SE T1, fluid attenuated inversion recovery imaging, T1-weighted magnetization transfer (MT), and postcontrast T1-weighted MT sequences on MRI. These animals were sacrificed after imaging and ex vivo imaging of the intact excised brain using the same imaging protocol was also performed. Grossing of these brains was done similar to the ex vivo imaging planes. Numeral density and external appearance of each cyst and scolex were evaluated on each pulse sequence. Amount of pericystic edema, if present, was also assessed. On histopathology, cellular characteristics, inflammatory response, and the extent of edema, if present, in the brain parenchyma around the cysts were graded. Cysts were categorized into viable, early, and late degenerated on histopathology. The MRI features of each cyst were correlated with their histopathologic findings.
Results: Out of 31 cysts, eight were found to be viable, 13 early degenerated, and 10 late degenerated on histopathology. T2-weighted imaging demonstrated all the cysts while T1-weighted imaging showed 97% of the cysts. Scolex was seen in 90.3% and 93.5% of the cysts on T2- and T1-weighted images, respectively. Minimal edema (grade I) and inflammation in degenerating cysts present on histopathology was not visible on MRI. All but one of eight degenerated cysts, which showed enhancement on postcontrast MRI, had edema on imaging as well as on histopathology.
Conclusion: T2-weighted MRI demonstrated all the cysts that were visible on histopathology. Non-enhancement of some of the degenerated cysts along with absence of edema on MRI is likely to underestimate the staging of neurocysticercosis evolution, and these early degenerating cysts may be misdiagnosed as in viable stage.
Copyright 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.