The patient was a 51-year-old man who had undergone living donor liver transplantation for type B cirrhosis at the age of 37 years, and had a history of immunosuppressive drug use. He had developed focal seizures starting from his right upper limb, and MRI showed a lesion in the subcortical white matter of his left parietal lobe. Sensory disturbance and paralysis progressed in his right upper and lower limbs, and his brain lesion rapidly enlarged. A brain biopsy revealed diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, and Epstein-Barr virus-encoded small RNA in situ hybridization was positive. The patient was diagnosed with primary central nervous system post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder (PCNS-PTLD) with no lesions in other organs. There are few reports of PCNS-PTLD cases after living donor liver transplantation in Japan. Although rare, it is nevertheless important to consider this disease in patients receiving immunosuppressive drugs after organ transplantation who develop brain lesions, regardless of which organ was transplanted.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.5692/clinicalneurol.cn-001991 | DOI Listing |
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