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1.
Multiple system atrophy with remarkable frontal lobe atrophy   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The autopsy findings of a multiple system atrophy (MSA) patient with remarkable frontal lobe atrophy are described. The patient was a 65-year-old woman with a 13-year history of untreatable parkinsonism, dysautonomia and progressive motor aphasia. The brain weight was 810 g, and there was remarkable atrophy of the cerebrum predominantly in the frontal lobe, striatum, pons and cerebellum. Microscopic examination revealed a preserved cortical structure with laminar gliosis in the sixth layer of the precentral and superior frontal gyri of the frontal lobe, and postcentral gyrus and inferior parietal lobule of the parietal lobe. The second layer of the cortices of these regions were also revealed to be in a spongy state, and mild cell loss was seen in the fifth and six layers. The frontal lobe white matter showed a mild loss of myelinated fibers and axons, and mild gliosis. Glial cytoplasmic inclusions (GCIs) were abundantly observed in the deep layer of the cortex in the regions mentioned above, and were more abundant in the white matter of the frontal and parietal lobes, callosal body, and internal, external and extreme capsules. There was severe degeneration in the olivopontocerebellar and striatonigral systems, and GCIs in widespread regions of the brain. No Pick bodies, Lewy bodies, ballooned neurons, senile plaques, or significant amounts of neurofibrillary tangles were detected. There were no vascular changes. Thus, this was a verified MSA patient with progressive aphasia and remarkable frontal lobe atrophy. We indicate a possible involvement of the cerebral lobes in MSA. Received: 5 August 1998 / Revised, accepted: 21 October 1998  相似文献   

2.
We report clinical, neuroradiologic features, and neuropathologic findings of a 76‐year‐old man with coexistent Pick’s disease and progressive supranuclear palsy. The patient presented with loss of recent memory, abnormal behavior and change in personality at the age of 60. The symptoms were progressive. Three years later, repetitive or compulsive behavior became prominent. About 9 years after onset, he had difficulty moving and became bed‐ridden because of a fracture of his left leg. His condition gradually deteriorated and he developed mutism and became vegetative. The patient died from pneumonia 16 years after the onset of symptoms. Serial MRI scans showed progressive cortex atrophy, especially in the bilateral frontal and temporal lobes. Macroscopic inspection showed severe atrophy of the whole brain, including cerebrum, brainstem and cerebellum. Microscopic observations showed extensive superficial spongiosis and severe neuronal loss with gliosis in the second and third cortical layers in the frontal, temporal and parietal cortex. There were Pick cells and argyrophilic Pick bodies, which were tau‐ and ubiquitin‐positive in neurons of layers II–III of the above‐mentioned cortex. Numerous argyrophilic Pick bodies were observed in the hippocampus, especially in the dentate fascia. In addition, moderate to severe loss of neurons was found with gliosis and a lot of Gallyas/tau‐positive globus neurofibrillary tangles in the caudate nucleus, globus pallidus, thalamus, substantia nigra, locus coeruleus and dentate nucleus. Numerous thorned‐astrocytes and coiled bodies but no‐tuft shaped astrocytes were noted in the basal ganglion, brainstem and cerebellar white matter. In conclusion, these histopathological features were compatible with classical Pick’s disease and coexistence with progressive supranuclear palsy without tuft‐shaped astrocytes.  相似文献   

3.
The patient was a 72‐year‐old Japanese woman. At the age of 57, she started having difficulty performing daily work and developed agraphia. She also exhibited restlessness and loss of interest, and began to speak less. Thereafter, stereotypical behavior, gait disturbance and dysphagia were noted. CT scan demonstrated left‐dominant frontal and temporal lobe atrophy. She died at the age of 72, about 16 years after the onset of symptoms. Neuropathologically, the brain weighed 867 g, and showed remarkable cerebral atrophy with degeneration of the white matter, predominantly in the left dorsal frontal lobe and anterior temporal lobe. Microscopically, severe neuronal loss and gliosis with rarefaction were found in the cerebral cortex, and severe destruction of myelin and axons was observed in the cerebral white matter. Moderate neuronal loss with gliosis was also found in the pallidum and substantia nigra. Gallyas‐Braak staining and tau immunostaining revealed pretangle neurons, NFTs, ballooned neurons and astrocytic plaques in the cerebral cortex, subcortical nuclei and brainstem, and argyrophilic threads and coiled bodies in the subcortical white matter. Tau isoform‐specific immunostaining revealed that most tau‐immunoreactive structures were positive for 4‐repeat (4R) tau, but some of the NFTs were positive for 3‐repeat (3R) tau in the cerebral neocortex. Immunoblotting demonstrated an accumulation of 4R tau in the cerebral cortex and subcortical white matter. The patient was pathologically diagnosed as having corticobasal degeneration. Her long survival course likely accounts for the severe white matter degeneration and accumulation of 3R tau in NFTs.  相似文献   

4.
There is little immunohistochemical information about the early stage of Pick body formation, due to the extremely limited opportunities of studying Pick's disease at the incipient or subclinical stage. We report a 62‐year‐old man without any clinical manifestations of Pick's disease, who died of B‐cell lymphoma of the brainstem. Post mortem examination revealed many Pick bodies without obvious neuronal loss mainly in the left frontal and temporal lobes. Three brains of patients with typical Pick's disease (disease duration: 7, 11 and 16 years) were also examined. Pick bodies were immunopositive for phosphorylated tau and 3‐repeat tau, and less consistently for p62 in both incipient and typical cases. In the incipient case, borderline positivity for ubiquitin was evident in only a few Pick bodies, whereas in the typical cases many Pick bodies showed obvious positivity for ubiquitin. These findings suggest that Pick bodies are rarely ubiquitinated in the early stage of Pick body formation.  相似文献   

5.
Brains from 12 patients dying with a clinical diagnosis of frontal lobe dementia have been examined at post mortem. In pathological terms four groups were encountered. Groups A and B showed severe frontal and temporal lobe atrophy characterised histologically in group A by severe neuronal loss, spongiform change of the superficial laminae, and mild astrocytosis; in group B severe neuronal loss was accompanied by intense gliosis but with little or no spongiform change. Two patients in this latter group also showed inclusions in frontal cortex and hippocampus typical of "Pick bodies"; such patients were considered as having classic "Pick''s disease". Group C patients showed severe striatal atrophy with variable cortical (frontal or temporal) involvement, with histological changes similar to patients in groups A and B. The single patient in group D showed mild frontotemporal atrophy with spongiform degeneration of the superficial laminae of the cortex and nigral damage, and was considered to have motor neuron disease with dementia. This study is consistent with previous reports showing that the clinical syndrome of frontal lobe dementia is pathologically heterogeneous. However, the nosological relationships within these pathological variants, and between them and conditions such as progressive aphasia were similar histopathological changes are present, remain uncertain.  相似文献   

6.
Here, we describe two patients who presented with focal cortical signs and underwent neuropathological examination. Case 1 was a 73-year-old woman with progressive speech disorder and abnormal behavior. She showed agraphia of the frontal lobe type, featured by the omission of kana letters when writing, other than pyramidal tract signs, pseudobulbar palsy, and frontal lobe dementia. Neuropathological examination, including TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43) immunohistochemistry, revealed bilateral frontal and anterior temporal lobe lesions accentuated in the precentral gyrus and posterior part of the middle frontal gyrus. Both upper and lower motor neurons showed pathological changes compatible with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Case 2 was a 62-year-old man with progressive speech disorder and hand clumsiness. He had a motor speech disorder, compatible with apraxia of speech, and limb apraxia of the limb-kinetic and ideomotor type. Neuropathological examination revealed degeneration in the left frontal lobe, including the precentral gyrus, anterior temporal, and parietal lobe cortices. Moreover, numerous argyrophilic neuronal intracytoplasmic inclusions (Pick body) and ballooned neurons were observed in these lesions and the limbic system. The pathological diagnosis was Pick disease involving the peri-Rolandic area and parietal lobe. In these two cases, the distribution of neuropathological changes in the cerebral cortices correlated with the clinical symptoms observed.  相似文献   

7.
We present an autopsied case of a senile Japanese woman with sporadic frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) presenting as frontotemporal dementia. Disease onset was at the age of 70 and presented as a behaviour disorder, particularly involving wasteful habits. The patient had repeated incidents of making expensive purchases and then had difficulty making payments. Following these symptoms, she showed other changes of character such as lethargy and apathy. She gradually showed signs of parkinsonism including rigidity and bradykinesia, and in the terminal stage, an akinetic mutism state with quadriplegia in flexion was observed. Head magnetic resonance imaging revealed severe frontotemporal lobe atrophy with severe lateral ventricular dilatation and frontal white matter degeneration. At autopsy, the brain weighed 930 g and the frontotemporal cerebral cortex showed neuron loss with gliosis, tissue rarefaction and spongiform change, particularly in the superficial layers. Pathologic degeneration was more severe in the anterior portion of the frontal lobe with extensive white matter degeneration. Immunostaining for phosphorylated TAR‐DNA binding protein 43 (TDP‐43) revealed numerous neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions and extensive short dystrophic neuritis, particularly in the frontotemporal cortex. Many TDP‐43‐positive cytoplasmic inclusions were also observed in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus. The patient was pathologically diagnosed with FTLD with TDP‐43‐positive inclusions (FTLD‐TDP) without motor neuron disease. The immunohistochemical findings corresponded to type A of the FTLD‐TDP pathology classification system.  相似文献   

8.
A Japanese woman developed frontotemporal dementia (FTD)‐like symptoms of abnormal behavior, such as stereotyped behavior and disinhibition. The patient developed these symptoms at the age of 59 years, although aphasia symptoms were not apparent at early disease stages. Progressive parkinsonism was dominant on the left side, and conspicuous myoclonus was recognized in the late disease stage. MRI indicated severe, right side‐dominant frontotemporal lobe atrophy with white matter degeneration. Brainstem and cerebellar atrophy were also observed. The patient underwent gastrostomy 7 years after the onset of her symptoms and died at the age of 70 years. Neuropathological examination showed diffuse neuron loss with gliosis and tissue rarefaction in the frontotemporal lobe, particularly in the right anterior portion of the frontal lobe. Spongiform changes and ballooned neurons were also observed in the frontotemporal cortex, particularly in the superficial layer and deeper layers, respectively. Gallyas‐Braak silver staining and anti‐phosphorylated tau immunostaining indicated numerous argyrophilic and tau‐positive structures, including pretangles, astrocytic plaques, coiled bodies and neuropil threads. We speculate that the myoclonus observed in the present case was at least partly caused by or related to the spongiform change and ballooned neurons in the cerebral cortex. The clinical phenotypes of corticobasal degeneration (CBD) vary considerably, and the clinical presentation of the present patient was compatible with frontal behavioral‐spatial syndrome in the early disease stage. However, in the later disease stages, her symptoms were reflective of corticobasal syndrome. Because it is not rare for the clinical phenotype to change along with disease progression in cases of CBD, we should consider CBD in cases presenting with FTD at symptom onset.  相似文献   

9.
We observed the characteristics of white matter fibers and gray matter in multiple sclerosis patients, to identify changes in diffusion tensor imaging fractional anisotropy values following white matter fiber injury. We analyzed the correlation between fractional anisotropy values and changes in whole-brain gray matter volume. The participants included 20 patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis and 20 healthy volunteers as controls. All subjects underwent head magnetic resonance imaging and diffusion tensor imaging. Our results revealed that fractional anisotropy values decreased and gray matter volumes were reduced in the genu and splenium of corpus callosum, left anterior thalamic radiation, hippocampus, uncinate fasciculus, right corticospinal tract, bilateral cingulate gyri, and inferior longitudinal fasciculus in multiple sclerosis patients. Gray matter volumes were significantly different between the two groups in the right frontal lobe(superior frontal, middle frontal, precentral, and orbital gyri), right parietal lobe(postcentral and inferior parietal gyri), right temporal lobe(caudate nucleus), right occipital lobe(middle occipital gyrus), right insula, right parahippocampal gyrus, and left cingulate gyrus. The voxel sizes of atrophic gray matter positively correlated with fractional anisotropy values in white matter association fibers in the patient group. These findings suggest that white matter fiber bundles are extensively injured in multiple sclerosis patients. The main areas of gray matter atrophy in multiple sclerosis are the frontal lobe, parietal lobe, caudate nucleus, parahippocampal gyrus, and cingulate gyrus. Gray matter atrophy is strongly associated with white matter injury in multiple sclerosis patients, particularly with injury to association fibers.  相似文献   

10.
A Japanese male patient presented with gait disturbance at the age of 69 years. His principal symptom was cerebellar ataxia for several years. He was initially diagnosed as having olivopontocerebellar atrophy because dysarthria and ataxia gradually developed, and head CT scan showed apparent atrophy of the cerebellum and brainstem and dilatation of the fourth ventricle. Later, he showed vertical gaze palsy, dysphagia, retrocollis, parkinsonism, axial dominant rigidity and grasp reflex, and therefore, the diagnosis was modified to progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP). Progressive atrophy of the frontotemporal lobe, cerebellum and brainstem, and dilatation of the lateral, third and fourth ventricles were evident on MRI. Gastrostomy and tracheotomy were performed 9 and 10 years after onset, respectively, and the patient died after 11 years disease duration. At autopsy the brain weighed 1000 g and showed atrophy of the frontotemporal lobe, cerebellum and brainstem. Neurofibrillary tangles, mainly globose‐type revealed by Gallyas‐Braak silver staining, were extensively observed in the cerebral cortex and subcortical grey matter. Numerous glial fibrillary tangles, including tuft‐shaped astrocytes and coiled bodies, and extensive argyrophilic threads were also recognized, particularly in the frontal lobe, basal ganglia, cerebellar white matter, brainstem and spinal cord. The Purkinje cell layer showed severe neuron loss with Bergmann's gliosis, and the dentate nucleus showed severe neuron loss with grumose degeneration. Tau‐positive/Gallyas‐positive inclusions in the Purkinje cells and the glial cells of the Purkinje cell layer were observed. Pathological findings of the present patient were consistent with the diagnosis of PSP, but the olivopontocerebellar involvement, particularly in the cerebellum, was generally more severe, and the quantity of tau‐positive/Gallyas‐positive structures were more abundant than in typical PSP cases. The existence of a distinct, rare PSP subtype with severe olivopontocerebellar involvement, “PSP‐C“, which tends to be clinically misdiagnosed as spinocerebellar degeneration in the early disease stage, is noteworthy. The present case corresponded to this rare subtype of PSP.  相似文献   

11.
We report a patient who developed personality change, dementia and parkinsonism. The patient was a Japanese woman who died at age 76. She developed memory problems at age 63. At age 66, she started showing personality changes, and began having short-step gait and mask-like face. On admission to our hospital at age 68, neurological examination showed mild memory deficit and postural instability. Six months after discharge, she developed delusion, rigidity, tremor, and gait disturbance. Her condition relentlessly progressed and she became bedridden at age 71. CT scan revealed marked atrophy of the frontotemporal lobes with enlargement of the lateral and third ventricles. The patient died at the age of 76 years. The patient was discussed in a neurological CPC, and a chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that the patient had frontotemporal dementia. Some participants thought that she had Pick disease or diffuse Lewy body disease. Severe atrophy of the frontal lobe and anterior part of the brain was seen at autopsy. Neuropathological examination showed severe neuronal loss with gliosis in the substantia nigra, pallidum, thalamus, and hippocampus. Moderate loss of neurons with gliosis was seen in the frontal and anterior temporal cortex. Argyrophilic and tau-positive neuronal inclusions which showed various shapes including Pick body-like inclusions and globose type of neurofibrillary tangles, were seen in the cerebral cortex and caudate. Argyrophilic and tau-positive astrocytes were also observed in the cerebral cortex. The pathological diagnosis was an unusual form of frontotemporal lobar degeneration with various tau-positive inclusions.  相似文献   

12.
We report on a patient presenting Pick's disease similar to the one reported by Pick in 1892, with ubiquitin-positive and tau-negative inclusions. His diagnosis was made on the basis of clinical (language disturbance and behavioural disorders), neuropsychological (progressive aphasia of the expression type and late mutism), neuroimaging with magnetic resonance (bilateral frontal and temporal lobes atrophy) and brain single photon emission computed tomography (frontal and temporal lobes hypoperfusion) studies. Macroscopic examination showed atrophy on the frontal and temporal lobes. The left hippocampus displayed a major circumscribed atrophy. The diagnostic confirmation was made by the neuropathological findings of the autopsy that showed neuronal loss with gliosis of the adjacent white matter and apearance of status spongiosus in the middle frontal and especially in the upper temporal lobes. There were also neuronal swelling (ballooned cell) and argyrophilic inclusions (Pick's bodies) in the left and right hippocampi. Anti-ubiquitin reaction tested positive and anti-tau tested negative.  相似文献   

13.
Front-temporal dementia (FTD), advocated by Lund and Manchester groups, includes Pick type corresponding to the conventional frontal Pick's disease, motor-neuron type associated with neural symptoms, and frontal lobe degeneration type. In Japan, however, there have been few case reports of the frontal lobe degeneration type. Here we examined clinical characteristics and imaging findings of 2 cases of FTD frontal lobe degeneration type. Neurological examinations were normal. CT and MRI scans revealed no obvious frontal lobar atrophy, while HMPAO-SPECT scans demonstrated remarkable hypoperfusion in anterior hemisphere. Neuropsychological examination revealed frontal symptoms, including personality change, stereotypes, and disinhibition. These symptoms can not be distinguished from the cases of FTD Pick type, because those cases of FTD Pick type have obvious lobar atrophy.  相似文献   

14.
The case of a patient who suffered from progressive amnesia, depressive humor, language and visuospatial disturbances, and hallucination episodies with interference at the daily living activities is reported. She had moderate neuropsychological diffuse deficits at the first examination, especially at the executive and visuo-constructive functions. Her cerebrospinal fluid test presented high total protein. Magnetic resonance image showed slight white matter increase in periventricular, semi-oval center bilateral and left external capsule regions, besides light frontal and parietal lobe atrophy, bilaterally. Brain single photon emission computerized tomography revealed both a bilateral moderate frontal and a severe parietal lobe hypoperfusion, especially on the left side. Macroscopic examination showed cortical atrophy, severe on the frontal, moderate on the parietal and mild on the posterior third temporal lobes, bilaterally. There was a slight atrophy on the neostriatum in the basal ganglia. The histopathological findings of the autopsy showed severe neuronal loss with intensive gemioscytic gliosis and variable degrees of status spongiosus in cortical layer. Hematoxylin-eosin and Bielschowsky staining did not show neuronal swelling (balooned cell), argyrophilic inclusion (Pick's bodies), neurofibrillary tangles nor senile plaques. Immunohistochemical staining for anti-ubiquitin, anti-tau, anti-beta-amyloide, and anti-prion protein were tested negative.  相似文献   

15.
This report concerns an immunohistochemical and ultrastructural study of cerebral astrocytes in a patient with Pick's disease of 20 years' duration. The autopsied brain was prominently small (710 g) with marked fronto-temporal lobar atrophy. Histological examination demonstrated profound neuronal loss and spongy changes with tau-positive Pick bodies in the frontal and temporal cortex. In addition, many glial cells in the temporal lobe white matter contained round to oval, argentophilic and slightly hematoxinophilic cytoplasmic inclusions that were also immunolabeled with the anti-tau antibody. On electron microscopy, the glial inclusions were observed in the perikarya of astrocytes that were recognized as such from intracytoplasmic glial filaments and the presence of gap junctions. The inclusions were free in the cytoplasm, without a limiting membrane, and mainly comprised irregular aggregations of bundles of about 15-nm straight tubules, which were indistinguishable from those of intraneuronal Pick bodies. Furthermore, various patterns of accumulation of the same straight tubules were frequently noted in perivascular astrocytic processes carrying a basal lamina. These findings indicate that in Pick's disease astrocytes are also affected by a similar insult to that which affects neurons.  相似文献   

16.
The autopsy findings of a 78-year-old man mimicking primary lateral sclerosis (PLS) are reported. He showed slowly progressive spasticity, pseudobulbar palsy and character change, and died 32 months after the onset of symptoms. Autopsy revealed severe atrophy of the frontal and temporal lobes, remarkable neuronal loss and gliosis in the precentral gyrus, left temporal lobe pole and amygdala, mild degeneration of the Ammon’s horn, degeneration of the corticospinal tract, and very mild involvement of the lower motor neurons. The anterior horn cells only occasionally demonstrated Bunina body by cystatin-C staining, and skein-like inclusions by ubiquitin staining. This is a peculiar case with concomitant involvement in the motor cortex and temporal lobe in motor neuron disease predominantly affecting the upper motor neuron. Received: 18 November 1997 / Revised, accepted: 2 April 1998  相似文献   

17.
Thirteen patients suffering from motor neuron disease with dementia were studied to analyze the clinicopathological spectrum. The diagnosis of the disease was made on the basis of a clinical history of progressive dementia and motor neuron involvement. The mean age at onset of 11 sporadic cases was 54.9 years (range, 43 to 69 years), with a mean duration of disease of 25 months (range, 11 to 47 months). The initial symptoms were dementia in 7 cases, motor neuron involvement in 2 cases, and both dementia and motor neuron involvement in 2 cases. The clinical picture of motor neuron disturbance in sporadic cases represented bulbar-type of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Bulbar palsy was the initial symptom in 7 sporadic cases and all 11 patients developed bulbar palsy with advancing course of illness. Muscular wasting and fasciculation were more predominant in the upper limbs, shoulder girdle and anterior chest. Fasciculation was more extensively and frequently observed in those portions than that of classical ALS. In contrast, muscle strength in the lower limbs was well preserved so that all patients could walk even when respiratory failure developed. Hyperreflexia including jaw jerk was found in all cases and positive Babinski sign in 7 cases. Parkinsonism appeared in the initial stage in one sporadic case and in two familial cases. The type of dementia with uninhibited behavior and personality change closely mimicked that of Pick's disease. The degree of dementia was mild or moderate in 8 cases and severe in 3 cases. Language disorder was characterized by progressive reduction of speech output, leading finally to mutism in 5 cases. Perseveration was observed in 10 cases. Visuospatial disorder was absent even in the advanced stage. Mild memory disturbance was noted in the early stage in 10 cases. Pathological examination was performed in 7 cases including one familial case, revealing frontal atrophy in 3 cases, frontotemporal atrophy in 2 cases and temporal atrophy in 2 cases. On microscopic examination there were mild neuronal loss, gliosis, mild spongy state of the cortical superficial layers and fibrous gliosis in the frontotemporal white matter. The scattered senile plaques in one case did not justify a diagnosis of Alzheimer's type dementia. Neither circumscribed atrophy nor Pick body was found in any case. The nucleus basalis of Meynert showed no neuronal loss. The substantia nigra showed a mild to severe loss of nerve cells without Lewy bodies in all cases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
BACKGROUND: Vascular factors are recognized as important risk factors for Alzheimer's disease, although it is unknown whether these factors directly lead to the typical degenerative pathology such as medial temporal lobe atrophy. We set out to investigate the relation between blood pressure and medial temporal lobe atrophy in patients with senile and presenile Alzheimer's disease with or without white matter lesions. METHODS: We determined the relation between blood pressure and pulse pressure and medial temporal lobe atrophy on MRI in 159 patients with Alzheimer's disease, stratified on white matter lesions and age at onset of dementia. RESULTS: There was a linear relation between systolic blood pressure and pulse pressure (both in tertiles) and the severity of medial temporal lobe atrophy (p(trend) = 0.05 and p(trend) 0.03, respectively). A significant relation was found between pulse pressure [beta = 0.08 (95% CI: 0.00-0.15; p = 0.05) per 10 mm Hg] and (borderline significant) systolic blood pressure [beta = 0.05 (95% CI: -0.01 to 0.11; p = 0.1) per 10 mm Hg] and medial temporal lobe atrophy. White matter lesions and age-stratified analysis revealed a significant association between systolic blood pressure and pulse pressure and medial temporal lobe atrophy, only in the subsample with white matter lesions and in the subsample with a senile onset of dementia. The relations were independent of severity of dementia and diabetes mellitus. CONCLUSIONS: Systolic blood pressure and pulse pressure are associated with medial temporal lobe atrophy in Alzheimer's disease, especially in the presence of white matter lesions and in patients with a late onset of dementia. Our finding may be another step in providing a rationale on how vascular factors could ultimately result in Alzheimer's disease.  相似文献   

19.
A right‐handed Japanese man with no consanguinity exhibited personality changes, speech disorder and abnormal behaviors, such as stereotypical, running‐away, environment‐dependent, and going‐my‐way behaviors, since the age of 49 years. At age 52 years, neuropsychological examination revealed frontal lobe dysfunctions, mild memory impairment, and transcortical sensory aphasia. MRI showed symmetrical severe atrophy of the anterior part of the temporal and frontal lobes. The clinical diagnosis was FTD. He died at age 54 years after a clinical illness of approximately 5 years. Numerous argyrophilic grains were observed throughout the limbic system, temporal lobe, frontal lobe and brainstem. In addition, there were many tau‐positive neurons and glial cells. These findings are all compatible with argyrophilic grain disease (AGD). Our case, however, is atypical AGD because of the young age of onset of the disease and sharply circumscribed cortical atrophy exhibiting severe neuronal loss and gliosis. Our case, together with some other similar cases of atypical AGD, gives rise to the possibility that this type of AGD would constitute a part of pathological background of FTD.  相似文献   

20.
Adult onset leukodystrophy with neuroaxonal spheroids is an uncommon cause of dementia. Both hereditary (autosomal dominant) and sporadic cases have been described. A 41‐year‐old African woman presented with inappropriate behavior and personality change consistent with frontal lobe dysfunction. MRI demonstrated diffuse frontoparietal white matter signal abnormality and volume loss, as well as focal enhancing white matter lesions, while CT scan showed white matter calcifications. She had been gradually deteriorating over the last 5 years, diagnosed as having progressive demyelinating illness. She died of recurrent chest infections. There was no familial history. The brain showed prominent symmetrical white matter changes with greyish discolorization mainly affecting the frontal and parietal lobes, with less involvement of the temporal lobe and only mildly affecting the occipital white matter. Histology revealed deep white matter atrophy with many neuroaxonal spheroids labelled by neurofilament and β‐amyloid precursor protein. In addition, scattered inactive demyelinating plaque‐like lesions were found in the periventricular areas, brainstem and the cervical spinal cord. This case had typical features of an adult onset leukodystrophy with neuroaxonal spheroids. However, we also demonstrated demyelinating plaque‐like lesions, which has not been previously described. The possibility of a demyelinating origin contributing to the changes may be considered in the pathogenesis of this condition.  相似文献   

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