A 62-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of high serum amylase and neck swelling. His chest radiography revealed a mass lesion in the right upper lung. Open lung biopsy specimen established the pathological diagnosis as intermediate type small cell lung cancer. In his clinical course, obstructive jaundice recurred several times with response to combination chemotherapy. The findings of abdominal echogram, computed tomography and endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography suggested that the jaundice was caused by extrahepatic biliary obstruction with parapancreatic lymph node metastasis. He died of spinal bleeding which spread from the medulla oblongata to the thoracic spinal cord. Bleeding was caused by intramedullary spinal cord metastasis. Both extrahepatic biliary obstruction and intramedullary spinal cord metastasis are rare and their symptoms were more prominent than those of the pulmonary lesion.