Headache, the most common symptom, is usually chronic headache repeatedly, with progressive aggravation as the disease progresses, the location and nature of the headache is not fixed, and at a later stage, if there are obvious symptoms of high cranial pressure, there will be headache accompanied by nausea and vomiting. Seizures are most common when the parasite involves the cerebral cortex causing organic damage, which can cause abnormal cellular discharges in the cerebral cortex, resulting in symptomatic epilepsy, generally most common with partial seizures, and can also be followed by generalized tonic clonic seizures. Third, symptoms of neurological deficits, which occur in variable locations, are related to the damaged brain parenchyma sites involved in brain parasitism. For example, temporal lobe injury may result in psychiatric disorders, mild hemiparesis in case of basal ganglia injury, and dizziness and ataxia in case of cerebellum.