Granulomatous angiitis masquerading as a mass lesion. Magnetic resonance imaging and stereotactic biopsy findings in a patient with occult Hodgkin's disease.
1989
Abstract Granulomatous angiitis is a frequently fatal central nervous system vasculitis of unknown pathogenesis sporadically associated with Hodgkin's disease, mixed cellularity type. We describe a 58-year-old woman presenting with headaches, progressive spastic paraparesis, equivocal computed tomography findings, and magnetic resonance imaging findings of increased signal intensity biparietally on T 2 -weighted imaging in a relatively discrete pattern. Magnetic resonance imaging-directed serial stereotactic biopsies revealed granulomatous angiitis throughout the right parieto-occipital region and splenium. Simultaneous biopsy of an enlarged submandibular mass revealed Hodgkin's disease, lymphocyte-predominant type. This case shows that granulomatous angiitis may be associated with magnetic resonance imaging findings suggesting a mass lesion in lymphoctye-predominant as well as mixed cellularity Hodgkin's disease.
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