Microvasculature in Brain Biopsy Specimens from Patients with Alzheimer's Disease: An Immunohistochemical and Ultrastructural Study |
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Authors: | Harry V. Vinters Diana Lenard Secor Stephen L. Read John G. Frazee Uwamie Tomiyasu Thomas M. Stanley Jorge A. Ferreiro Mari-Anne Akers |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, The Brain Research Institute, University of California, Los Angeles Medical Center, Los Angeles, California, USAb Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of California at Los Angeles Medical Center, Los Angeles, California, USAc The John Douglas French Center, Los Alamitos, California, USAd West Los Angeles Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Los Angeles, California, USA |
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Abstract: | Brain biopsy specimens from five patients with Alzheimer's disease obtained in the course of a trial of intracerebroventricular bethanechol were studied by immunohistochemical (antibody to A4 peptide) and ultrastructural techniques, with particular emphasis on the microvessels. In some cases, numbers of A4-immunoreactive lesions (senile plaques) correlated well with numbers of plaques demonstrable by silver stains. Prominent A4-immunoreactive amyloid angiopathy was seen in one patient. The patient with severe cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) showed extensive arteriolar deposition of amyloid filaments with apparent destruction of the media but remarkably intact endothelium. A cell of origin for amyloid filaments was not apparent, although close proximity to smooth muscle cell remnants in the arteriolar media suggested this as one possible cell of origin. Frequent vessels showed medial or adventitial collagen deposition, even when the amount of amyloid was minimal or negligible. Thus relatively severe CAA can exist in the absence of overt endothelial injury, although related studies on this tissue indicate definite abnormalities of the blood-brain barrier. Conversely, destruction of smooth muscle cells and collagen deposition in vessel walls may be the cellular correlates of arteriolar weakening that can lead to CAA-related brain hemorrhage. |
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Keywords: | Alzheimer's disease amyloid angiopathy blood-brain barrier brain biopsy cerebral microvasculature |
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