Brain imaging.Photo: Getty

brain scan

A man living in Boston — who medical personnel say was otherwise in good health — was diagnosed with a tapeworm infection after experiencing mysteriousseizures.

According to a study published inThe New England Journal of Medicineon Nov. 11, the horrifying series of events unfolded when the man, 38, began behaving strangely one night while at home with his wife.

His wife called police, explaining that her husband fell out of bed at around 4 a.m. and was on the floor “shaking,” the study reveals. An exact timeline was not made clear in the study.

The article states that the man was “confused” and “speaking gibberish.” When officials arrived at the home, the man was transported to Massachusetts General Hospital where he was treated for seizures. The study states that the man was “combative,” “disoriented” and continued to exhibit strange behavior.

The man’s “altered mental status” and seizures came as a shock as he “had not been ill recently and had no history of seizures or cardiovascular, respiratory, gastrointestinal, genitourinary, or neurologic disorders,” according to the study.

Doctors also note in the study that the man “rarely” drank alcohol or used tobacco and other illicit drugs.

With no known cause of the seizures, doctors performed a neurologic exam, laboratory testing and looked at cerebral imaging.

Doctors explain in the study that the disease is “indolent,” meaning it can go unnoticed because “because the eggs form cysts that do not generate a clinically significant immune response for approximately 5 years.”

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A similar incident was observed in the 1930s in former soldiers who returned to England after serving in India, according to the study. Patients experienced an “inflammatory response” years after the initial exposure.

While it is not immediately clear how long the man has been infected, doctors explain in the journal article that he emigrated from a “rural area” of Guatemala," prompting researchers to “consider endemic infectious diseases that could have increased this patient’s risk for seizures even years after exposure, such as a parasitic brain infection.”

source: people.com