Eh. Reynolds et al., SUBACUTE COMBINED DEGENERATION WITH HIGH SERUM VITAMIN-B12 LEVEL AND ABNORMAL VITAMIN-B12 BINDING-PROTEIN - NEW CAUSE OF AN OLD SYNDROME, Archives of neurology, 50(7), 1993, pp. 739-742
Subacute combined degeneration of the spinal cord due to vitamin B-12
deficiency invariably has been associated with a low serum vitamin B-1
2 level. We describe a young man who presented with a unique syndrome
of subacute combined degeneration associated with high serum vitamin B
-12 level, low red blood cell vitamin B-12 level, and an abnormal plas
ma vitamin B-12-binding protein. Uptake of cobalamin by his leukocytes
in vitro was inhibited by his own but not by normal control plasma. I
ntensive hydroxocobalamin (vitamin B-12) treatment was associated with
clinical and electrophysiologic recovery accompanied by normalization
of mean corpuscular volume, red blood cell vitamin B-12 level, plasma
homocysteine, and urinary methylmalonic acid. The subacute combined d
egeneration was probably precipitated by treatment with folic acid as
the significance of his high serum vitamin B-12 level was not apparent
when he first presented with megaloblastic anemia 3 years earlier. To
our knowledge, this is the first example of neurologic disease associ
ated with high serum vitamin B-12 level and provides further evidence
that sometimes a serum vitamin B-12 level may not be a reliable guide
to vitamin B-12 deficiency.