VHOSPITAL.CLINIC · Imaging Test
Abdominal ultrasound is the first-line and most important imaging investigation for echinococcosis — the WHO ultrasound classification (CE1–CE5) defines cyst type, viability, and treatment strategy.
Real-time sonographic imaging — first-line modality for detecting parasitic cysts, organomegaly, and hepatic/splenic lesions.
Ultrasound is ideal for hepatic hydatid cysts: it is radiation-free, widely available, and provides real-time cyst morphology. The WHO Informal Working Group on Echinococcosis (WHO-IWGE) classification based on ultrasound stages (CE1–CE5) guides management decisions.
Standard abdominal ultrasound with a 3.5–5 MHz transducer. Examines liver (most common), spleen, kidneys, and peritoneum. Assesses cyst location, size, number, wall characteristics, internal architecture, and evidence of biliary communication. Doppler is added if vascular involvement is suspected.
CE1: unilocular anechoic cyst with double-wall sign (active). CE2: multivesicular/multiseptate cyst with daughter cysts (active). CE3a: cyst with detached membranes ('water lily sign' — transitional). CE3b: predominantly solid cyst with daughter cysts (transitional). CE4: heterogeneous, no visible daughter cysts (inactive). CE5: calcified cyst wall (inactive). CE1/CE3a = treat; CE4/CE5 = watch and wait.
Sensitivity for hepatic cysts: 95–98%. Specificity: 85–90% (distinguishing from simple hepatic cysts, abscesses). Less sensitive for lung (30–50%) and bone cysts. For peritoneal cysts, CT or MRI may be needed. WHO classification has interobserver reproducibility >85% in experienced hands.
The classic appearance is a unilocular anechoic (black) cyst with a visible double-wall sign (CE1 stage). More advanced cysts show internal septa, daughter cysts (producing the 'honeycomb' or 'wheel-spoke' pattern), or a detached inner membrane — the pathognomonic 'water lily sign' (CE3a).
Ultrasound combined with serology (ELISA) is sufficient for diagnosis in most cases. However, in stage CE4/CE5 (inactive cysts), serology may be negative, requiring CT or MRI for morphological confirmation. Tissue diagnosis (aspiration or biopsy) is rarely needed.
For active cysts (CE1, CE2, CE3b) receiving treatment: every 3–6 months during treatment, then annually. For watch-and-wait cysts (CE4, CE5): annually for 5 years, then every 2–5 years. Size increase, change in stage, or new symptoms trigger immediate reassessment.
Echinococcosis is caused by larval stages of Echinococcus tapeworms, forming slowly growing cysts primarily in the liver and lungs. It is acquired from contact with infected dogs or contaminated food. Surgical removal and albendazole are the main treatments.
Get a structured AI clinical assessment — possible parasitic causes, recommended diagnostic tests, and next steps.
Start Free AI Analysis →Content on this page is informed by evidence-based clinical sources including: