Pagenstecher A, Franz M, Volk B
Pathologisches Institut, Universität Freiburg.
Nervenarzt. 1994 Aug;65(8):549-52.
We report a case of limbic encephalitis in a 71-year-old male who presented with amnesia, confusion and disorientation. The patient's history of long standing alcoholism suggested the diagnosis of Korsakow syndrome. Autopsy, however, revealed a regional lymph-node metastasis of a small-cell bronchial carcinoma. No primary malignoma could be detected. These findings indicate that in cases of limbic encephalitis without detectable primary malignoma a paraneoplastic syndrome cannot be excluded. This has to be taken into consideration when discussing the etiology of limbic encephalitis (paraneoplastic versus virus-induced).