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A cerebral lymphoma mimicking a meningioma: case report.

INTRODUCTION: Cerebral lymphoma is a rare and aggressive brain tumor. It accounts for 1% of all non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL) and 2% of all brain tumors. Untreated brain lymphoma has a very poor prognosis, with an overall life expectancy of around 1.5 months.

CASE PRESENTATION: The authors report the case of a 35-year-old patient, with no previous pathological history, who presented for 3 weeks with deafness and recently aggravated otalgia. In MRI, brain imaging revealed a formation initially suggestive of an aggressive meningioma, and the histological study of the operative specimen was in favor of a diffuse large-cell non-germ-center B NHL.

CLINICAL DISCUSSION: Primary central nervous system lymphoma is an extra-nodal NHL localized to the brain, meninges, spinal cord, and eyes. In 90% of cases, these are diffuse large B-cell lymphomas, the other types being poorly characterized low-grade lymphomas, T-cell lymphomas, and Burkitt's lymphomas. MRI with gadolinium contrast is the gold standard for diagnosis which enhancement is homogeneous and well-limited, frequently associated with perilesional vascular edema. In T2-weighted sequences, there is a weak signal with restricted diffusion on diffusion-weighted imaging. The management of brain lymphoma is currently based on chemotherapy with high-dose methotrexate combined with the other agents, mainly rituximab.

CONCLUSION: Cerebral lymphoma remains a non-negligible entity of central nervous system tumors, which can be confused with several other tumors, mainly glial and meningioma.

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