We report a 50-year-old male having metamorphopsia associated with retinal edema. He was well until one month prior to the present admission when he developed occipital headache and backache. Three weeks later, he noted a sudden onset of twisting of visual images. On admission, he was in no acute distress with well preserved general conditions. Only neurological abnormalities were bilateral papilledema, retinal edema and horizontal nystagmus with a rotatory component. Routine blood chemistries were unremarkable. The CSF contained 28 cells/cmm with 60% consisting of large atypical cells. Cranial CT scans revealed no mass, however, the magnified orbital CT showed bilateral swelling of the optic nerve. He was treated with ventriculoperitoneal shunt and Ommaya tube placement through which methotrexate, cytarabine and prednisolone were administered. He was also treated with systemic cisplatin, mitomycin-C and 5-fluorouracil. With these therapy, his headache, metamorphopsia and papilledema improved. He was discharged for out-patient follow-up, however, he had to admitted again because of progressive difficulty of gait and loss of appetite. On admission, he complained of severe backache, and his gait disturbance appeared to be in part due to his backache. A slight weakness was noted in all four limbs with loss of deep reflexes. Mentally he was alert and cranial nerves appeared intact without papilledema. But nuchal rigidity was noted. Cranial CT scan revealed attenuation of all the cortical sulci and marked diffuse low density changes in the cerebral white matter, and his chest film revealed a ring-shape shadow in his left lung field. He deteriorated progressively with terminal gastrointestinal hemorrhage. He expired three weeks after his second admission.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)