Epidemiology
- More common in rural regions
- Endemic in the Mediterranean, Middle East, South America, China
Etiology
- Zoonotic infection caused by the tapeworm Echinococcus
- E. granulosus – causes cystic echinococcosis (most common)
- E. multilocularis – causes alveolar echinococcosis
Life cycle of E. granulosus
Definitive host – dog
- Ingests infected sheep offal
- E. granulosus develops in the dog’s intestine into a parasite – released eggs, which are passed in the dog faeces
Intermediate hosts – humans (and sheep/cattle)
- Ingest crops contaminated by dog faeces and eggs
- Egg hatches inside small intestine of human – releases larva that moves through the circulatory system
- Especially liver (through portal vein) and lungs
- Once in the organ, larva develops into a cyst
Pathophysiology
3 layers of the cyst- Adventitia (pseudocyst) – an inseparable fibrous tissue due to reaction of the liver to the parasite
- Laminated membrane (ectocyst) – formed of the parasite itself; contains hydatid fluid
- Germinal epithelium – only living part lining the cyst (endocyst). This layer secretes hydatid fluid, brood capsules with scolices (heads of future worms)
Disease course
- Parasite may die and cyst eventually calcifies
- Commonly cyst enlarges an is palpable per abdomen
- Rupture into biliary tree – most common
- May cause complications e.g. jaundice due to pressure over biliary tree
- Rupture into peritoneal cavity – anaphylactic reaction, life threatening shock
- Secondary infection – causes suppuration and septicaemia
- Secondary cysts in lung, spleen, mesentery
- Hepatic dysfunction
- Disseminated abdominal hydatidosis after silent rupture
Clinical features
- Can be asymptomatic
- Palpable liver with classical thrill (hydatid thrill) – elicited by 3 finger test
- Jaundice and pain
- Features of anaphylaxis
- Discomfort in right upper quadrant, dyspepsia, weight loss, fatigue, vomiting
- Occasionally – splenomegaly, pleural effusion, cholangitis, fever
- Water lily sign – following intrabiliary rupture, gas enters into cyst causing partial collapse of cyst wall
Investigations
- US diagnostic – shows rosettes of daughter cysts, double contoured membranes, calcification of cyst wall
- XR – calcification
- CT abdomen
- Water lily sign – following intrabiliary rupture, gas enters into cysts causing partial collapse of cyst wall
- Serologic tests – ELISA, latex agglutination
- Liver function tests
- MRI – to visualise biliary tree in case of jaundice
- ERCP – endoscopic retrograde cholangio-pancreatography
Treatment
Drugs
- Albendazole – ovicidal/larvicidal. 4 week cycles with 2 week drug free interval
- Praziquantel – 60mg/kg with albendazole
- Mebendazole – 600mg daily for 4 weeks
PAIR – Puncture, Aspiration, Injection, Reaspiration
- Done under US/CT guidance
- Cyst punctured under local anaesthesia and fluid is aspirated
- Radiopaque dye is injected to visualise any communication present
- Scolicidal agent injected into cyst and after 20 minutes reaspiration is done
- Scolicidal agents – alcohol, hypertonic saline, hydrogen peroxide
Surgery
- Laparoscopic pericystectomy and liver resection – gold standard therapy
- Fluid aspirated and scolicidal agent injected