A Patient with Malignant Spinal Epidural Lymphoma with Initial Rapidly Aggravating Paraplegia ()
ABSTRACT
We report the case of a 51-year-old female with rapid neurological deterioration as an initial presentation of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Paraplegia occurred suddenly after a 4-day history of weakness and numbness of the lower extremity. MRI revealed a dorsal epidural mass from T10 to T11 that compressed the spinal cord. There was neither bone destruction nor a paravertebral mass. Emergency decompressive laminectomy and tumor resection were performed. Histological analysis of the surgical specimen indicated diffuse large B cell lymphoma. The clinical stage was IV on CT and complete remission was achieved by subsequent chemotherapy. Spinal cord compression occurs in the course of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma in 0.1% - 6.5% of cases, but this situation usually develops in the late phase with bone destruction and/or a paravertebral mass. Cord compression and especially the severe symptoms such as paraplegia are rare as the initial presentation of lymphoma.
Share and Cite:
Go, T. , Iida, Y. , Aoki, H. , Tsuge, S. , Hasegawa, K. , Yokoyama, Y. , Wada, A. , Akishima-Fukasawa, Y. and Takahashi, H. (2017) A Patient with Malignant Spinal Epidural Lymphoma with Initial Rapidly Aggravating Paraplegia.
Open Journal of Orthopedics,
7, 90-97. doi:
10.4236/ojo.2017.73011.
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