Acute encephalitis in an adult with diffuse large b-cell lymphoma with secondary involvement of the central nervous system: Infectious or non-infectious etiology?

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Abstract

Both infectious and non-infectious etiologies of acute encephalitis have been described, as well as their specific presentations, diagnostic tests, and therapies. Classic findings of acute encephalitis include altered mental status, fever, and new lesions on neuroimaging or electroencephalogram (EEG). We report an interesting case of a 61-year-old male with a history of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma with secondary involvement of the central nervous system (SCNS-DLBCL). He presented with acute encephalitis: altered mental status, fever, leukocytosis, neuropsychiatric symptoms, multiple unchanged brain lesions on computed tomography scan of the head, and EEG showed mild to moderate diffuse slowing with low-moderate polymorphic delta and theta activity. With such a wide range of symptoms, the differential diagnosis included paraneoplastic and autoimmune encephalitis. Infectious and autoimmune/paraneoplastic encephalitis in patients with SCNS-DLBCL are not well documented in the literature, hence diagnosis and therapy becomes challenging. This case report describes the patient’s unique presentation of acute encephalitis.

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APA

Moonga, S. S., Liang, K., & Cunha, B. A. (2017). Acute encephalitis in an adult with diffuse large b-cell lymphoma with secondary involvement of the central nervous system: Infectious or non-infectious etiology? Journal of Clinical Medicine, 6(12). https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm6120117

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