Abstract
In areas where human cystic echinococcosis (CE) is endemic, the results of ultrasonographic or X-ray examinations have revealed a surprisingly high prevalence of abdominal cysts in asymptomatic individuals. The results of preliminary studies indicate that the ratio of liver infection:lung infection (LI:LU) is much higher in the asymptomatic individuals (9:1 or 7:1) than is usual among symptomatic cases of liver CE (2:1). This difference may indicate that, compared with lung cysts, liver cysts rarely cause morbidity, perhaps because they grow at a slower rate than those in the lungs. In an attempt to explore this possibility, the published results of ultrasonographic and radiological surveys on general populations and the records of autopsies and hospital-based investigations of symptomatic cases of liver CE were reviewed. In general populations, the overall prevalence of cysts in the liver (2.5%) was found to be much higher than that of cysts in the lungs (0.3%), giving a LI:LU ratio of 8.3:1. In the symptomatic cases, however, LI:LU ratios were only 2.5:1 (based on hospital records) or 4.1:1 (based on autopsy records). In addition, the estimated mean growth rate of the cysts in 53 surgical cases of CE from the province of Río Negro in Argentina was found to be significantly higher than that of the cysts in 89 asymptomatic cases detected during ultrasonographic surveys in the same area.