A 66-year-old woman with an 80-pack-year smoking history presented with subacute ptosis, diplopia, facial palsy, dysarthria, dizziness, syncope, headache, and behavior and cognitive changes after 2 weeks of excessive alcohol consumption due to bereavement. MRI/MRA brain were normal. She was empirically treated for Wernicke encephalopathy without improvement. Due to persistent symptoms, she presented to our institution where her exam was significant for mild cognitive impairment, dysconjugate gaze, fatigable ptosis, proximal limb weakness, hyporeflexia, limb and truncal ataxia. Nerve conduction studies revealed low amplitude compound muscle action potentials of the left fibular, tibial, ulnar, and facial nerves. Repetitive nerve stimulation after a 10-second exercise showed 187% facilitation of the left fibular and 407% facilitation of the left facial nerves. Acetylcholine receptor-binding antibody was negative, however P/Q calcium (0.25; cutoff<0.02), serum TRIM46 (1:15360), CSF TRIM46 (1:256), serum GAD-65 (18.9; cutoff<0.02), and CSF GAD-65 (0.33; cutoff <0.02) were positive. CSF analysis revealed lymphocytic pleocytosis. Biopsy of an enlarged porta hepatis lymph node was positive for metastatic small cell lung carcinoma. She was started on 3,4-diaminopyridine, IV methylprednisolone, pyridostigmine, and chemotherapy with neurologic stability at 3-month follow-up.