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Cerebellopontine Metastatic Carcinoma of Small Cell Lung Cancer Mimiking Vestibular Neuritis
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Young Hyo Kim, Kyu Sung Kim, Yoon Seok Oh, Hoseok Choi
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J Korean Bal Soc. 2007;6(2):226-229.
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Abstract
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- A 77-year-old man visited our department because of dizziness from one month ago. Dizziness was continuous and non-whirling and this type of dizziness was the first time. He also complained of tinnitus and hearing impairment of the right ear. On physical examination, he showed spontaneous left-beating horizontal and torsional nystagmus and rightward head thrust was positive. He was admitted under the first impression of right vestibular neuritis.
On inner ear MRI, there was a well-demarcated 2.5×2.3 cm sized mass of right cerebellopontine angle. This mass showed somewhat low signal intensity in both T1 and T2-weighted image and modest enhancement with Gadolinum.
And approximately 4.5×3 cm sized mass could be seen in the simple chest roentgenogram.
On chest CT, there was a poorly demarcated 3×2.5 cm sized mass in left lower lobe of lung. The patient was diagnosed as small cell lung cancer with brain metastasis by Per-Cutaneous Needle Aspiration of lung. In spite of radiotherapy and concurrent chemotherapy, he expired after 5 months.
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