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A Case of Recurrent Ischemic Stroke due to Intravascular Lymphomatosis, Undiagnosed by Random Skin Biopsy and Brain Imaging.

Abstract
Intravascular lymphoma (IVL) is a rare disease characterized by the proliferation of lymphoma cells in the lumen of the small blood vessels. Although early diagnosis of IVL is important to prolong survival of the patients, its atypical symptoms and clinical course often delay its diagnosis. More than half of the patients are diagnosed at autopsy. We report a 68-year-old man who presented with transient ideomotor apraxia and mildly elevated soluble interleukin-2 receptor levels. He was initially diagnosed with aortogenic embolic stroke. He developed rapidly progressive neurological manifestations with enlargement of brain lesions on brain computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging and died 3 months after symptom onset. The diagnosis of IVL could not be made by random skin biopsy, but was finally made at autopsy. For the early diagnosis, sufficient random skin biopsy or brain biopsy should be planned when suspected.
AuthorsYuichiro Ohya, Masato Osaki, Shouta Sakai, Shunsuke Kimura, Tatsuro Shimogamo, Tetsuro Ago, Takanari Kitazono, Shuji Arakawa
JournalCase reports in neurology (Case Rep Neurol) 2017 Sep-Dec Vol. 9 Issue 3 Pg. 234-240 ISSN: 1662-680X [Print] Switzerland
PMID29279711 (Publication Type: Case Reports)

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