1. Small Cell Lung Cancer at Subcarina Presenting as a Metastatic Brain Tumor
- Author
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Mi Ae Kim, Ji Hyun Lee, Eunkyung Kim, and Hye Cheol Jeong
- Subjects
Oncology ,CA15-3 ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,respiratory tract diseases ,Metastatic brain tumor ,Internal medicine ,Biopsy ,Subcarinal ,Cerebral hemisphere ,medicine ,Non small cell ,Lung cancer ,business - Abstract
A 59-year-old man was rushed to the emergency room. The patient complained of headache with impaired memory function. Brain MRI showed a necrotic tumor in Lt cerebral hemisphere, with severe peritumoral edema (Fig. 1). Pathologic examination of the brain lesion confirmed that the tumor was a small cell lung cancer (SCLC). Chest computed tomography revealed a large soft tissue mass with central necrosis at subcarinal area in spite of an initial normal chest X-ray (Fig. 2). Bronchoscopic biopsy of the polypoid mass at subcarina revealed that the mass was a SCLC (Fig. 3). This is the case of SCLC only with an extrapulmonary symptoms despite of a normal chest X-ray. When metastatic brain tumor was found, appropriate chest evaluation should be performed even though chest X-ray was normal because brain is a common site of invasion of lung cancer. (J Lung Cancer 2010;9(1):24 25)
- Published
- 2010
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