Cysticercosis in humans is a serious public health problem, predominantly affecting low and middle-income countries (LMICs). Cysticercosis, the infection with the larval form of the pork tapeworm, Taenia Solium has high prevalence in areas where there are poor sanitary conditions and domestic pig without adequate veterinary control. Humans are the definitive host and pigs are the main source of infection. Human infection occurs when pork is eaten raw or undercooked. Ingested eggs or proglottids hatch into larvae form, which penetrate the intestinal wall into the blood stream and migrate into different organs including subcutaneous tissues, brain, eyes and rarely heart or lung, where they mature into cysticerci. Pulmonary cysticercosis has been rarely described; case reports are predominantly in adults and are usually of disseminated disease. In children the data are very scarce, with a single case report of a two-year old child with pulmonary infiltration, eosinophilia and subcutaneous cysticercosis.