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A 52 year-old man with a history of lymphoma, previously treated, presented with progressive weakness and numbness of the legs with bladder and bowel incontinence and perineal numbness. |
Neurolymphomatosis:
(Left) T1-weighted sagittal MRI;
(Right) T1-weighted with gadolinium sagittal MRI. Note the conus at the lower
aspect of L1 and the descending nerve roots that enhance with gadolinium. Subsequent CSF analysis
showed lymphoma cells. Neurolymphomatosis may occur in isolation, or as part of widely systemic lymphoma either during the initial diagnosis or as the first sign of relapse in a treated patient. It is much more frequently seen in non-Hodgkins compared with Hodgkins lymphoma. It presents as a progressive sensorimotor polyneuropathy, cauda equina syndrome or isolated mononeuropathy (the sciatic nerve being the most common). |
Revised
11/30/06
Copyrighted 2006. David C Preston