Subacute necrotizing lymphadenitis (SNL) was first reported by Kikuchi (1972) and Fujimoto et al.SNL has a characteristic clinical pattern of fever, lymphadenopathy, and leukopenia; the prognosis is usually favorable. Eighty-five percent of the cases affected by the disease are under the age of 30 years.SNL may be a reactiton to a viral infection, such as that caused by the Epstein-Barr virus or Toxoplasma, but the etiology of this disorder remains obscure.We encountered a patient who was found to have a high elevation of antibody titer to E-B virus, and a positive Paul-Bunnell reaction. A diagnosis of infectious mononucleosis (IM) was considered highly likely, but histopathological findings revealed SNL.This case may be associated with the E-B virus. Case reports of infectious mononucleosis which lack some of the clinical and hematological features of the disease despite a high elevation of antibody titer to E-B virus and a positive Paul-Bunnell reaction, may found to include SNL if biopsy of the lymph nodes is carried out.