 Human angiostrongelosis is an emerging zoonotic disease caused by the larvae of three species of metastrongeloid nematodes of the genus angiostrongelus with angiostrongelus cantonensis, chin, 1935, being the predominant species. Its obligate heteroxynous life cycle involves rats as definitive hosts, molluscs as intermediate hosts, and amphibians and reptiles as paratonic hosts. In humans, the infection manifests as either angiostrongelus eosinophilic meningitis, AM, or ocular form. Since there has been no comprehensive study conducted in the Indian subcontinent, our study aimed to investigate the increasing incidence of angiostrongelosis in humans alongside its clinical course and possible causes. A systematic literature search revealed 28 reports of 45 human cases from 1966 to 2022 eosinophilic meningitis accounted for 33 cases, 75.5 percent, 12 cases were reported as ocular, one case was. This article was authored by Diva Karan Pondiyan, Tomas Najer, and David Madri. We are article.tv, links in the description below.