Close
Help
Home Journals Subjects About My LA Reviewers Authors News Submit
Username: Password:
.
(close)

(Ctrl-click to select multiple journals)


How should we address you?

Your email address


Enter the three character code
Visual CAPTCHA
Privacy Statement

Non-small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) Presenting as Isolated Facial Nerve Palsy from Metastasis to Temporal Bone: A Report Discussing Unique Presentation and Evolution with Diagnostic and Management Dilemmas

Authors: Manpreet Singh Tiwana, Shrinivas Rathod, Tejpal Gupta and Jai Prakash Agarwal
Publication Date: 20 May 2010
Indian Journal of Clinical Medicine 2010:1 3-6

Manpreet Singh Tiwana, Shrinivas Rathod, Tejpal Gupta and Jai Prakash Agarwal

Department of Radiation Oncology, Tata Memorial Hospital, Ernest Borges Marg, Parel, Mumbai, India, 400012.

Abstract

We present the case of a 67-year-old man with a three month history of right sided facial nerve palsy reporting to our clinic for evaluation of a recently seen suspicious mass in the right lung. Subsequently he was diagnosed with advanced NSCLC right lung and started on palliative chemotherapy. Furthermore, temporal bone metastasis was discovered on radiological imaging while investigating symptoms of acute mastoiditis and persisting facial neuralgia, a symptom completely overlooked at first as Idiopathic Bell’s palsy. This presentation is exceptionally unique, although temporal bone metastasis arising from established primary lung or other malignancies is itself rare, and predilect to a later onset in the natural history of the disease, as reported in the literature. None of the published literature report neither addresses the optimal management course nor its subsequent impact on quality of life of patients with temporal bone metastasis.

Categories: Oncology , Case report