Severe toxoplasmosisWhen newly infected with
toxoplasmosis, most people either at first feel like
they have the flu or do not feel sick at all. This is why people rarely know
whether or when they've had toxoplasmosis. A person with an immune system weakened by
HIV infection, organ transplant medicines, or
lymphoma can develop life-threatening toxoplasmosis.
Antibiotic therapy is often used to prevent this from happening, and severe
infection requires aggressive treatment. Severe symptoms vary depending on which part of the body is affected.
If the infection is in the: - Brain (encephalitis),
symptoms include seizures, sensory changes, weakness, changes in behavior or
mental state, and problems with movement.
- Eye (chorioretinitis),
symptoms include eye pain and gradual vision loss in one or both
eyes.
- Lungs (pneumonia), symptoms include fever and
chills, breathing problems and a cough that can cause chest wall pain, fatigue,
and weakness.
- Heart (myocarditis), symptoms include irregular
heartbeat,
signs of pericarditis, and
signs of heart failure.
On rare occasions, seemingly healthy people have been known to
develop serious symptoms of toxoplasmosis.1
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