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Case Reports
. 1978 Apr 14;218(1):63-71.
doi: 10.1007/BF00314720.

Carcinomatous encephalomyelopathy in conjunction with encephalomyeloradiculitis

Case Reports

Carcinomatous encephalomyelopathy in conjunction with encephalomyeloradiculitis

W H Zangemeister et al. J Neurol. .

Abstract

A man, aged 63, had an illness which lasted 11 months from onset with pain under the left costal margin which radiated to the epigastrium, until his death from cardiac failure. His symptoms consisted principally of parasthesias and proximal weakness of both upper and lower extremities with atrophy of the shoulder and pelvic girdles. He developed pyramidal tract signs, became euphoric, emotionally unstable and mentally retarded. There was no clinical evidence of cerebellar dysfunction. Bronchogenic carcinoma was suspected from a tomograph of the thorax, but, in spite of extensive clinical and laboratory studies, the diagnosis was verified only postmortem. The CSF cell count was high at first but diminished as the disease progressed. Muscle biopsies revealed chronic generalized denervation without signs of myopathy. Neuropathologically, encephalomyeloradiculoneuritis concentrated on the spinal cord was combined with severe rarefaction of the ganglion cells of the anterior horns and with bilateral degeneration of the lateral pyramidal spinocerebellar and posterior tracts. A more diffuse process was obvious in the anterolateral tracts of the lumbar region. Polyneuropathy concentrated in the distal region was accompanied by slight inflammatory reaction in the sciatic nerve. Cerebellocortical degeneration which exceeded physiological age-related rarefaction was also present. The findings are discussed in relation to the literature.

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