Angiostrongyliasis is caused by infection and migration to the brain of larvae of
the parasitic nematode Angiostrongylus cantonensis, or rat lungworm. Adult A. cantonensis
reside in the lungs of the definitive wild rodent host, where they produce larvae
passed in feces, which are then ingested by snails and slugs (gastropods). Human infection
typically occurs when gastropods containing mature larvae are inadvertently ingested
by humans. Although human infection often is asymptomatic or involves transient mild
symptoms, larval migration to the brain can lead to eosinophilic meningitis, focal
neurologic deficits, coma, and death. The majority of cases of human angiostrongyliasis
occur in Asia and the Pacific Islands, including Hawaii, but autochthonous and imported
cases have been reported in the continental United States (
1
,
2
), underscoring the importance of provider recognition to ensure prompt identification
and treatment. The epidemiologic and clinical features of 12 angiostrongyliasis cases
in the continental United States were analyzed. These cases were identified through
A. cantonensis polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing (
3
) of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) submitted to CDC from within the continental United
States. Six cases were likely a result of autochthonous transmission in the southern
United States. All 12 patients had CSF pleocytosis and eosinophilia, consistent with
eosinophilic meningitis. Health care providers need to be aware of the possibility
of angiostrongyliasis in patients with eosinophilic meningitis, especially in residents
in the southern United States or persons who have traveled outside the continental
United States and have a history of ingestion of gastropods or contaminated raw vegetables.
Cases of human angiostrongyliasis were identified through review of results of A.
cantonensis PCR (
3
) testing performed at CDC on CSF specimens from January 2011, when this test became
available, through January 2017. A presumptive case was defined as detection of A.
cantonensis DNA by PCR testing of a clinical CSF specimen submitted to CDC by a diagnostic
laboratory located in the continental United States. A confirmed case was a presumptive
case with health care provider documentation of clinically compatible disease. Clinical
and epidemiologic information was also obtained directly from providers based on review
of medical records with patient consent and, when available, from published case reports.
Abstracted data included vital signs, clinical signs and symptoms at the time of initial
evaluation, hospital course, clinical progression, and laboratory data.
A. cantonensis DNA was detected in 34 (49.3%) of 69 persons whose CSF specimens were
received and tested by CDC during January 2011–January 2017. Specimens from 17 of
these 34 patients were submitted from within the continental United States and, therefore,
were considered presumptive angiostrongyliasis cases. In one presumptive case, the
patient was determined by the provider to have an alternative diagnosis, and the PCR
result (which required >32 cycles to detect DNA) was considered to be a false positive.
Among the remaining 16 presumptive cases, the median patient age was 20 years (range = 1–68
years), and 10 were male. The 16 patient specimens were submitted from eight states,
including six from California, four from Texas, and one each from Utah, Colorado,
Arizona, Alabama, Tennessee, and New York. Eight patients had traveled to areas outside
the continental United States (Asia, the Caribbean, or Pacific Islands) during the
12 months preceding initial evaluation, six (four in Texas and one each in Tennessee
and Alabama) had no history of travel outside the continental United States, and the
travel history was unknown for two patients in California.
Six of 11 patients reported consumption of raw vegetables, three from local gardens
(Table 1). Two of 12 patients had consumed raw snails and for two others, family members
reported the presence of snails in the environment. Two of nine patients reported
consumption of prawns (with one patient specifying the prawns as being cooked), and
one of nine patients ate cooked crab. One of 11 patients was reported to have consumed
slugs, and one had possible exposure to slugs. Among the six patients who had not
traveled outside the continental United States, two had consumed raw vegetables, three
had possible exposure to snails or slugs, and one had a history of geophagia.
TABLE 1
Exposures reported in 16 patients with presumed angiostrongyliasis with detectable
Angiostrongylus cantonensis DNA on polymerase chain reaction testing at CDC — continental
United States, January 2011–January 2017
Exposure
No. of exposures
Yes (%)*
Possible
No
Raw vegetables†
6/11 (55)
0
5
Prawns
2/9 (22)
0
7
Snails
2/12 (17)
2
8
Crabs
1/9 (11)
0
8
Slugs
1/11 (9)
1§
9
Frogs
0/8 (0)
0
8
* Percentages were calculated using denominators based on availability of complete
exposure data.
†
Three patients were known to have consumed vegetables from a local garden.
§ This patient was a toddler who was often permitted to crawl in a yard known to contain
slugs.
A diagnosis of angiostrongyliasis was confirmed in 13 of the 16 presumptive cases
from providers (10 patients), published case reports (two) (
1
,
4
), and personal communications (one). Complete clinical information was available
for 12 of these patients (Table 2). The most frequently reported symptoms were subjective
fever, generalized weakness, headache, and numbness/tingling. Neurologic exam findings
during initial evaluation included cranial nerve deficits (five of 11), nuchal rigidity
(four of 12), focal weakness (three of 10), and paresthesias (one of eight). Irritability
was noted in three patients, two of whom also had ataxia during the initial evaluation;
a separate patient had ataxia at 20 days. During initial evaluation, 10 of 12 patients
had peripheral eosinophilia (>600 eosinophils/mm3). All 12 patients with CSF microscopy
and chemistry results had pleocytosis during initial evaluation; 10 had CSF eosinophilia
(≥10% of all leukocytes in CSF or ≥10 eosinophils/mm3) on initial evaluation and two
on subsequent lumbar puncture. Six of 11 patients also had hypoglycorrhachia (CSF
glucose <40 mg/dL) at the time of initial evaluation. Repeat lumbar punctures were
performed in eight of 11 patients. On magnetic resonance imaging or computed tomography,
eight of 11 patients had brain abnormalities, and five of six had spinal cord abnormalities.
Abnormalities were also observed in the optic nerve of two patients. A chest computed
tomography scan in one patient had multiple small focal areas of consolidation.
TABLE 2
Symptoms, physical exam findings, and laboratory results for 12 patients with angiostrongyliasis
with detectable Angiostrongylus cantonensis DNA on polymerase chain reaction testing
at CDC — continental United States, January 2011–January 2017
Observation/Finding*
Present, No.
Absent, No.
Proportion with symptom/sign present (%)†
Symptom/Sign
Subjective fever
8
2
8/10 (80)
Generalized weakness
7
2
7/9 (78)
Headache
6
2
6/8 (75)
Numbness/Tingling
3
3
3/6 (50)
Photophobia
4
5
4/9 (44)
Visual changes
3
4
3/7 (43)
Vomiting
3
6
3/9 (33)
Stiff neck
2
7
2/9 (22)
Rash
2
7
2/9 (22)
Nausea
1
5
1/6 (17)
Phonophobia
1
6
1/7 (14)
Abdominal pain
1
7
1/8 (13)
Itching
1
8
1/9 (11)
Diarrhea
3
NA
NA
Hyperesthesias/diffuse allodynia
2
NA
NA
Physical exam
Vital signs
Fever (temperature ≥100.4°F [≥38.0°C])
3
8
3/11 (27)
Tachycardia (>100 bpm in adults aged ≥16 yrs, age-dependent in persons aged <16 yrs)
1
10
1/11 (9)
Hypoxia (O2 saturation <90%)
0
10
0/10 (0)
Neurologic exam findings
Cranial nerve deficits
5
6
5/11 (45)
Nuchal rigidity
4
8
4/12 (33)
Focal weakness
3
7
3/10 (30)
Paresthesias
1
7
1/8 (12)
Loss of consciousness
0
10
0/10 (0)
Irritability
3
NA
NA
Ataxia
2
1§
NA
Laboratory results on initial evaluation
Cerebrospinal fluid
Pleocytosis of CSF (≥6 WBC/mm3)
12
0
12/12 (100)
CSF eosinophilia (eosinophils ≥10% of all leukocytes in CSF or ≥10 eosinophils/mm3)
10
2¶
10/12 (83)
Hypoglycorrhachia (CSF glucose <40 mg/dL)
6
5
6/11 (54)
Complete blood count
Peripheral eosinophilia (>600 eosinophils/mm3)
8
2
8/10 (80)
Leukocytosis (>11x103 WBC/mm3 in persons aged >21 yrs, age-dependent in persons aged
≤21 yrs)
3
9
3/12 (25)
Abbreviations: bpm = beats per minute; CSF = cerebrospinal fluid; NA = not available;
O2 = oxygen; WBC = white blood cells.
*Confirmed by the patient’s health care provider
† Percentages were calculated with different denominators based on availability of
complete clinical data.
§ This patient developed ataxia 20 days after initial evaluation.
¶ These two patients were found to have CSF eosinophilia on repeat lumbar puncture.
Eleven of 12 patients with confirmed cases received systemic steroids, as advised
in treatment recommendations (
5
). Seven patients received an antiparasitic (albendazole). Two months after initial
evaluation, all 12 patients were alive, 11 had improvement of symptoms, and four had
ongoing focal neurologic symptoms (cranial nerve palsies or lower extremity weakness).
Only one patient developed seizures (5 months after the initial diagnosis) for which
antiepileptics were given.
Discussion
Among 12 confirmed cases of angiostrongyliasis in the continental United States during
January 2011–January 2017, six likely resulted from autochthonous transmission in
the southern United States. The possibility of autochthonous transmission is supported
by evidence of infection with A. cantonensis among intermediate snail hosts and nonhuman
vertebrate hosts in the southern United States. Infection has been observed in exotic
and native snail species in Florida and Louisiana (
6
,
7
) and in rat species in Louisiana, Florida, and Oklahoma (
6
). Infection with larvae has been documented in other vertebrates including opossums
and nine-banded armadillos in Louisiana and Florida (
8
), an American miniature horse in Mississippi, and captive exotic primates in Louisiana,
Florida, and Alabama (
7
).
The majority of patients in this series had subjective fever, generalized weakness,
headache, and CSF pleocytosis consistent with meningitis. Most also had presence of
eosinophils in both peripheral blood and CSF, and hypoglycorrhachia, which is usually
associated with bacterial, fungal, or tuberculous meningitis. All 12 patients eventually
developed CSF eosinophilia, as did all hospitalized patients during a 2000 outbreak
of eosinophilic meningitis caused by A. cantonensis among travelers to the Caribbean
(
2
). Although no specific treatment for A. cantonensis infection currently exists (https://www.cdc.gov/parasites/angiostrongylus/),
nearly all patients in this series were treated with systemic steroids, which have
been determined to decrease the duration of headaches (
5
), and approximately half of patients were treated with albendazole, for which conflicting
evidence of efficacy in treating headache can be found (
9
,
10
). Whether these treatments affected the clinical course for these patients is unclear.
The findings in this report are subject to at least two limitations. First, all cases
in this series were identified from specimens tested at CDC, and consequently might
not be a comprehensive description of all illnesses caused by A. cantonensis in the
continental United States during this time. Second, exposures are incompletely reported
in some cases, and clinical histories from three presumptive cases could not be obtained.
Health care providers in the United States, especially those in areas in the southern
United States where autochthonous cases have been reported, need to be aware of the
possibility of angiostrongyliasis in patients with eosinophilic meningitis. Ingestion
of gastropods or locally obtained raw vegetables* contaminated with A. cantonensis
larvae in the southern United States, even in the absence of a travel history, should
increase provider suspicion for angiostrongyliasis.
Summary
What is already known about this topic?
Ingestion of snails or slugs containing Angiostrongylus cantonensis larvae can result
in angiostrongyliasis, characterized by eosinophilic meningitis. Angiostrongyliasis
typically occurs in Asia and the Pacific Islands.
What is added by this report?
CDC identified 12 angiostrongyliasis cases in the continental United States occurring
from January 2011 through January 2017. Consumption of raw vegetables was reported
in the majority of cases (55%). Six were likely autochthonous cases occurring in the
southern United States.
What are the implications for public health practice?
Health care providers, especially those in the southern United States, need to consider
angiostrongyliasis in patients with eosinophilic meningitis, particularly those with
a history of ingestion of gastropods or raw vegetables contaminated with larvae.