A 64-year-old woman presented with subacute progressive ophthalmoparesis and pressure-like headache, mainly in the occipital region, 6 months after being diagnosed with systemic large B-cell lymphoma and 4 weeks after finishing six cycles of cytotoxic chemotherapy and rituximab. Over the next 2 months, she developed numbness of her face and upper and lower extremities (in a dermatomal distribution). In the next several weeks, first her left arm, then her right arm and both legs became weak and she started using a wheelchair.
On neurological examination, she had a near-complete bilateral ophthalmoplegia (with relative sparing of abduction) and unreactive pupils, sensory impairment in the left V2 and V3 distribution and lower motor neuron pattern quadriparesis, with both proximal and distal involvement. Review of the brain and spinal cord magnetic resonance imaging, although reported as normal by an outside radiologist, revealed enhancement and thickening of multiple cranial nerves, bilateral cervical, and lumbar nerve roots and brachial plexi (Fig. 1). Differential diagnosis included chronic infectious versus lymphomatous meningitis.Reference Little, Dale and Okazaki 1 , Reference Clarke 2 Nerve root thickening on the magnetic resonance imaging, however, favored a malignant process. Examination of the cerebrospinal fluid revealed a lymphocytic pleocytosis and the presence of malignant B lymphocytes. Visualizing cranial and spinal nerve roots on the clinical magnetic resonance imaging scans are possible, and close inspection of these anatomical structures on neuroimaging can aid in narrowing down the differential diagnosis.
Disclosures
The authors do not have anything to disclose.
Statement of Authorship
CC, BN, and CG undertook study concept and design and drafting/revising the manuscript. EB revised the manuscript.