Original Article

Neurologic manifestations as the presenting symptoms in lung cancer

Abstract

This case series reports 100 patients with lung cancer and their presenting neurologic symptoms and sings. 78% of patients were maleand 22% were female. Mean age was 62±1.04 years with a peak age between 65 and 75 years. Most patients presented with pulmonary problems (58%) and neurologic deficits as the presenting manifestations were found to be 30% along with pulmonary symptoms and 12% laking them. Neurologic deficits were caused by local tumor invasion, metastasis and paraneoplastic syndromes in 16%, 23% and 3% of the cases respectively . Recurrent nerve pusly was the most common presenting neurologic sign. Common metastatic sites were spinal cord (12%) and brain (11%). Local invasion was mostly found in squamous cell and brain metastasisin adenocarcinoma. In refrence to spinal metastasis most patients had small cell and squamous cell carcinoma. Ophthalmoplegia as a paraneoplastic syndromeis not reported in lung cancer but one of our patients developed complete ophthalmoplegia in left eye with normal imaging studies that seems interesting and needs further investigation.
Files
IssueVol 40, No 3 (2002) QRcode
SectionOriginal Article(s)
Keywords
Lung cancer Presenting neurologic symptom Local invasion Paraneoplastic syndrome

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Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
How to Cite
1.
Ghaffarpour M, Firouzbakhsh SH, Glichnia Omrani H, Mansoorian B. Neurologic manifestations as the presenting symptoms in lung cancer. Acta Med Iran. 1;40(3):198-202.