Disturbing scans reveal why you must always wash your hands properly after using the toilet

A DISTURBING scan described by a doctor as the “craziest” he’s ever seen highlights why you should always give your hands a good wash after going to the toilet.

It shows the lower body of a patient, which is riddled with rice grain-like pinpricks – a telltale sign of a nasty parasitic infection that can spread to the brain, eyes or muscles.

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Cysticercosis is an parasitic infection caused by ingesting larvae eggsCredit: X/@EM_RESUS

The scan was shared by Dr Sam Ghali, an urgent care doctor from the University of Florida, who often shares images of bizarre and baffling conditions to his X account before revealing the diagnosis a day later.

“Here’s one of the craziest scans I’ve ever seen,” he said in a recent post accompanying the picture.

The doctor revealed that the patient in question was suffering from parasitic infection called cysticercosis.

It’s an infection caused by the larvae of the parasite Taenia solium, which occurs after a person swallows tapeworm eggs.

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This may happen if you ingest contaminated food or water.

About 2.5million people are thought to be infected with Taenia solium every year, most frequently in the poorer regions of Asia, South America and Eastern Europe.

According to Dr Ghali, T. solium eggs can be found in undercooked pork – though the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) notes that eating pork can’t give you cysticercosis.

But you can also get the infection from someone who doesn’t wash their hands properly after going to the loo, as eggs are passed in on in the poop of someone with a tapeworm.

Once you’ve ingested tapeworm eggs – through contaminated food and water or touching contaminated surfaces – they mature into adult tapeworms over a period of several weeks.

This is a condition called intestinal taeniasis, Dr Ghali explained.

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“These adult tapeworms then shed eggs which are in turn excreted into human faeces,” the doctor went on.

“It’s very important to note that it is only when these eggs are ingested via faecal-oral transmission that one can develop the clinical syndrome known as cystericosis,” he noted.

In these cases, the eggs will release larvae that penetrate the intestinal wall before invading the bloodstream, allowing them to spread “to literally anywhere in the body”.

Dr Ghali described how larvae can burrow into skeletal muscles, tissue just under the surface of the skin, the eyes and even the brain, forming cysts known as cysticerci.

Symptoms of cysticerci

Symptoms of cysticercosis caused by T. solium can in some cases take years to appear.

Some infected people may develop visible or palpable subcutaneous nodules.

Neurocysticercosis is associated with a variety of signs and symptoms depending on the number, size, stage, and location the cysts, but people can also remain asymptomatic.

Symptoms may include:

  • Chronic headaches
  • Blindness
  • Seizures (epilepsy if they are recurrent)
  • Hydrocephalus
  • Meningitis
  • Symptoms caused by lesions occupying spaces of the central nervous system

Source: WHO

The body’s immune system typically kills offthe cysts, which calcify and form “rice grain”-like nodules that are visible in the scan.

If the larvae do end up travelling to the brain tissue and form cysts – referred to as neurocysticercosis – this can be “really bad”, according to Dr Ghali.

“This can lead to headaches, confusion, seizures, and other serious neurologic issues,” he warned.

According to the CDC, symptoms of cysticercosis will depend on the number of cysts that have formed and where in the body they have ended up.

Infections are generally treated with a combination of anti-parasitic drugs and anti-inflammatory drugs, but “treatment isn’t always necessary for every case of cysticercosis,” it went on.

Surgery might also be required in some cases.

“Even if you don’t need treatment to kill the parasite, you may need treatment for the symptoms caused by the infection, such as medication to reduce seizures,” the CDC added.

According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), neurocysticercosis is the most frequent preventable cause of epilepsy worldwide and is estimated to cause 30 per cent of all epilepsy cases in countries where the parasite is endemic.

Dr Ghali said: “The prognosis for cysticercosis is generally good but unfortunately some cases are fatal.

“It’s estimated that around 50 million people worldwide are infected each year resulting in about 50,000 deaths.

“So the moral of the story here is do your best to keep clean, always wash your hands, and never, ever eat raw or under-cooked pork.”

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