A long-term female smoker presented to the emergency department with cough, greenish mucus and dyspnoea, without fever. The patient also reported abdominal pain and significant weight loss in recent months. Laboratory tests showed leucocytosis with neutrophilia, lactic acidosis and a faint left lower lobe consolidation on chest X-ray, for which she was admitted to the pneumology department and started on broad-spectrum antibiotherapy. After 3 days of clinical stability, the patient deteriorated rapidly, with worsening of analytical parameters and coma. The patient died a few hours later. Given the rapid and unexplained evolution of the disease, a clinical autopsy was requested, which revealed a left pleural empyema caused by perforated diverticula by neoplastic infiltration of biliary origin.
A 39-year-old woman was referred to the neurology department due to headache, instability and difficulty walking for 5 months. Several ancillary tests were performed. The blood test showed leucocytosis and the cerebrospinal fluid revealed an increased total protein and glucose consumption. Other infections or autoimmune causes were excluded. The MRI showed non-specific brain and spinal cord lesions. Given the findings described, a differential diagnosis between granulomatous meningoencephalitis and primary tumour or metastasis was proposed. Empirical treatment with tuberculostatic agents and corticosteroids was started. The neurological state of the patient worsened, she fell into a non-responsive coma and died in few days. The clinical autopsy performed revealed an adenoid cystic carcinoma with involvement of the central nervous system that developed leptomeningeal dissemination along the spinal cord in a fluid ‘wash’ pattern.
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