A 53-year-old male with Celiac disease on azathioprine presented with one-week of vertigo, diplopia, and dysarthria upon one-year of malaise and cachexia. The patient’s examination revealed right eyelid ptosis, bilateral abducens palsies, restricted up-gaze, dysarthria, and diffuse dysmetria and hyporeflexia. MRI showed a right T2 hyperintense contrast-enhancing cerebellar lesion and a small left cerebellar diffusion-restricting lesion. CSF was inflammatory (nucleated cell 6 cells/mcL, protein 181 mg/dL, glucose 30 mg/dL). Workup for autoimmune encephalitis, myelin-oligodendrocyte-glycoprotein-IgG, aquaporin-4-IgG, and infections etiologies were negative. He was empirically treated with intravenous methylprednisolone and immunoglobulin without benefit.
He continued to decline and repeat CSF was again inflammatory (28 cells/mcL, protein 494 mg/dL), without clonal cells. Repeated MRI showed new left frontal leptomeningeal and cauda equina enhancement extending into the adjacent musculature. Electromyography showed proximal myopathy and subsequent biopsy was unrevealing. A bone marrow and brain biopsy were declined due to development of pulmonary embolism and multiorgan failure. He continued to decline and developed multifocal strokes, expiring 6 weeks after presentation. Autopsy demonstrated peripheral T cell lymphoma (PTLC).