Peripheral nervous system involvement has been reported in systemic B or T cell lymphoma and may result from intraneural localization of lymphoma resulting in meningo-radiculopathy or mononeuropathies, or manifest as a sensory-motor polyneuropathy sometimes mimicking chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy. We report two patients with a previously unknown NHL presenting in both with a stepwise progressive asymmetric multiradiculoneuropathy initially misdiagnosed as inflammatory radiculopathy. A 58-year-old man presented with a 2 year history of stepwise progressive peroneal sensory loss, impotence, and lower limb painful asymmetric neuropathy. Lumbosacral MRI was normal. Electrophysiological studies were consistent with an axonal multiradiculoneuropathy while CSF examinations repeatedly showed increased protein levels (80–91 mg/dl) with slightly increased white cells (<10 mm3) but no malignant cell. The patient repeatedly failed to respond to steroids although he consistently deteriorated at their suspension. An MRI performed 2 years later when multiple cranial nerve palsies appeared showed bilateral T1 and T2 hyperintensities in the brain and cervical spinal cord. An extensive investigation for neoplasm was negative. The patient died from an intracranial hemorrhage during anticoagulant therapy for deep vein thrombosis. Autoptic studies revealed a widespread non-Hodgkin's type B lymphoma with massive systemic and neural involvement including cauda equina and spinal cord. A 54-year-old man presented with a 1 year history of impotence, urinary incontinence, progressive asymmetric painful distal sensorimotor impairment at four limbs and prominent weight loss. Four previous CSF examinations revealed increased protein levels (80–100 mg/dl), and slightly but inconsistently increased white cells (1–11/mm3) but no malinant cells. Steroids were repeatedly ineffective although the patient consistently deteriorated whenever steroids were discontinued. On admission electrophysiological studies showed an axonal asymmetric polyradiculoneuropathy. Brain and spinal MRI was normal while bone marrow biopsy and aspiration disclosed a B cell lymphoma.

Peripheral nervous system involvement as presenting symptom of systemic B-cell lymphoma / C. Casellato, A. Di Troia, F. Terenghi, E. Nobile-Orazio. - In: JOURNAL OF THE PERIPHERAL NERVOUS SYSTEM. - ISSN 1085-9489. - 9:2(2004), pp. 108-109. ((Intervento presentato al 9. convegno Meeting of the Italian Periheral Nerve Study Group and Joint meeting with the Italian Association of Myology tenutosi a Taormina nel 2004 [10.1111/j.1085-9489.2004.009209p.x].

Peripheral nervous system involvement as presenting symptom of systemic B-cell lymphoma

E. Nobile-Orazio
2004

Abstract

Peripheral nervous system involvement has been reported in systemic B or T cell lymphoma and may result from intraneural localization of lymphoma resulting in meningo-radiculopathy or mononeuropathies, or manifest as a sensory-motor polyneuropathy sometimes mimicking chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy. We report two patients with a previously unknown NHL presenting in both with a stepwise progressive asymmetric multiradiculoneuropathy initially misdiagnosed as inflammatory radiculopathy. A 58-year-old man presented with a 2 year history of stepwise progressive peroneal sensory loss, impotence, and lower limb painful asymmetric neuropathy. Lumbosacral MRI was normal. Electrophysiological studies were consistent with an axonal multiradiculoneuropathy while CSF examinations repeatedly showed increased protein levels (80–91 mg/dl) with slightly increased white cells (<10 mm3) but no malignant cell. The patient repeatedly failed to respond to steroids although he consistently deteriorated at their suspension. An MRI performed 2 years later when multiple cranial nerve palsies appeared showed bilateral T1 and T2 hyperintensities in the brain and cervical spinal cord. An extensive investigation for neoplasm was negative. The patient died from an intracranial hemorrhage during anticoagulant therapy for deep vein thrombosis. Autoptic studies revealed a widespread non-Hodgkin's type B lymphoma with massive systemic and neural involvement including cauda equina and spinal cord. A 54-year-old man presented with a 1 year history of impotence, urinary incontinence, progressive asymmetric painful distal sensorimotor impairment at four limbs and prominent weight loss. Four previous CSF examinations revealed increased protein levels (80–100 mg/dl), and slightly but inconsistently increased white cells (1–11/mm3) but no malinant cells. Steroids were repeatedly ineffective although the patient consistently deteriorated whenever steroids were discontinued. On admission electrophysiological studies showed an axonal asymmetric polyradiculoneuropathy. Brain and spinal MRI was normal while bone marrow biopsy and aspiration disclosed a B cell lymphoma.
Settore MED/26 - Neurologia
2004
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/192670
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