Tsushima K, Koyama S, Chino M, Ichiyoshi T
Department of Internal Medicine, Nagano Red Cross Hospital, Japan.
Nihon Kokyuki Gakkai Zasshi. 1998 Sep;36(9):798-802.
A 71-year-old man was referred to us with diplopia, left peripheral facial nerve dysfunction, ataxic gait and dysesthesia of the extremities. Neurological examination revealed mild reduction of sensation to pinprick and light touch in the left dominant lower leg. His standing position was wide based, and he showed Romberg's sign. The patient also presented signs of left peripheral facial, bilateral abducent, and left oculomotor nerve dysfunction. Serum levels of CEA, CA 19-9, and proGRP were high. 67Gallium scintigraphy showed an accumulation of radioactivity at the hilum of the right lung, and the findings of bronchofiberscopy were compatible with the diagnosis of small cell lung cancer. Because the symptoms gradually worsened to the point that the patient could not move by himself, chemotherapy and radiotherapy were initiated 3 months after the onset of symptoms. While under chemotherapy, symptoms of neuropathy subsided and the patient was able to walk with the aid of a walking stick. Although all symptoms were indicative of carcinomatous neuropathy, no antineuronal antibodies were detected in the patient's serum by immunohistochemical techniques. However, because the lung cancer deteriorated gradually despite therapy, the patient died of respiratory failure. At autopsy, tumor metastases were found in the pericardium, left lung, both adrenal glands, right hilum lymph nodes, and mediasternal lymph nodes. No microscopic signs of metastases were found in the frontal, parietal, temporal, or occipital lobes, or in the basal ganglia, thalamus, midbrain, pons, cerebellar vermis and hemispheres, or upper medulla. Histopathologically, there was no degeneration of neuronal cell bodies in cerebellar or cervical dorsal root ganglia; however, almost total loss of myelinated fibers or variegated demyelination of myelinated fibers was observed in the anterior, lateral and posterior funiculus at both cervical segments of the spinal cord. The number of myelinated fibers was smaller in the 5th and 6th cervical left ventral roots. The reason why the patient's symptoms subsided during chemotherapy was probably a suppression of antineuronal antigen by chemotherapy and the repair of myelinated fibers.