[A case of inflammatory demyelinative myelopathy after bone marrow transplantation].
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We experienced a case of demyelinating, inflammatory cervical myelopathy after bone marrow transplantation for chronic myelocytic leukemia (CML). A 28 years-old man who had been having skin and liver graft versus host disease (GVHD), developed paresthesia in the legs, and then, difficulty in walking. At the time of admission, weakness of the hands also appeared. There was no evidence of CML recurrence after bone marrow transplantation. The myelopathy was characterized by multiple abnormal spotty signal intensities in the cervical spinal cord on MRI and these were in part Gd-enhanced. A course of pulse-dose methylprednisolone was given, followed by prednisolone. The neurological deficits were improved to the degree of full recovery. The inflammatory myelopathy together with a plaque in the cerebral hemisphere, moderately delayed p-100 latency of VEP and elevation of myelin basic protein of the spinal fluid, is difficult to distinguish from that of multiple sclerosis. Although the precise mechanism of GVHD-myelopathy is not known, it is likely that the donor myelin-reactive T-lymphocytes were non-specifically activated with GVHD reaction and directed to a central nervous system. Tacrolimus might have precipitated the focal immune reaction by way of cytotoxic effects on brain capillaries. The "GVHD-myelopathy" presented here may thus be akin to multiple sclerosis in its immune mechanism.