Abstract
Patients with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma occasionally develop widespread invasion of peripheral nerves by tumor cells or neurolymphomatosis (NL). Clinically this usually results in asymmetrical, progressive, and painful polyneuropathy. Diagnosis rests on the identification of tumor cells in peripheral nerves. To avoid false-negative biopsy findings in patients with malignant lymphomatous infiltration of peripheral nerves it has been recommended to biopsy clinically involved nerves. We present two patients with histologically confirmed NL in whom sural the nerve biopsy finding was negative despite clinical and neurophysiological evidence of involvement of the sural nerve a. The clinical features of NL are reviewed. Some patients with neurolyphomatosis have only focal or proximal involvement of nerves, requiring the biopsy of an affected part of these nerves. Magnetic resonance imaging may be useful in identifying affected nerves.
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Received: 28 January 1999 Received in revised form: 7 July 1999 Accepted: 17 July 1999
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van den Bent, M., de Bruin, H., Bos, G. et al. Negative sural nerve biopsy in neurolymphomatosis. J Neurol 246, 1159–1163 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1007/s004150050535
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s004150050535