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Late Pseudo-Exacerbation of Myasthenia Gravis Due to Ectopic Thymoma Invading Lower Cranial Nerves

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 September 2015

Gregg MacLean
Affiliation:
Divisions of Neurology and Hematology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa General Hospital, Ottawa
Alan Guberman*
Affiliation:
Divisions of Neurology and Hematology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa General Hospital, Ottawa
Antonio Giulivi
Affiliation:
Divisions of Neurology and Hematology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa General Hospital, Ottawa
*
Division of Neurology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa General Hospital, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1H 8L6
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Abstract:

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Dysarthria, dysphagia and repeated aspiration in a 54-year-old woman diagnosed and treated for myasthenia gravis 7 years earlier were initially thought to represent a late exacerbation of myasthenia. A cervical mass invading the jugular foramen and causing multiple lower cranial nerve palsies was biopsied and found to represent invasive ectopic thymoma.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Neurological Sciences Federation 1990

References

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