Clinicopathological multiplicity of dementia with Lewy bodies |
| |
Authors: | Eizo Iseki,Wami Marui,Kenji Kosaka,Masanori Kato,Takayuki Yamamoto,Kenji U da |
| |
Affiliation: | Eizo Iseki,Wami Marui,Kenji Kosaka,Masanori Kato,Takayuki Yamamoto,Kenji Uéda |
| |
Abstract: | ‘Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB)’ is a generic clinicopathological concept characterized by progressive dementia and Lewy bodies (LB). We examined 23 autopsied DLB cases clinicopathologically and immunohistochemically. These cases were classified into the neocortical type (10 cases), the limbic type (seven cases), the cerebral type (one case) and the brainstem type (none) according to our pathological criteria, which were based on the regional incidence of LB and the degree of neuronal loss in the substantia nigra. Each subtype of DLB was further divided into the common form and the pure form on the basis of the degree of Alzheimer pathology. The remaining five cases were not classified by our pathological criteria, and were designated ‘the senile dementia of Alzheimer type (SDAT) or Alzheimer's disease (AD) type of DLB with neocortical or limbic LB’. We examined how each subtype was correlated with various clinical features, such as the age of disease onset, the clinical duration, the degree of dementia, and the presence or absence of parkinsonism, fluctuating cognition and visual hallucination. The results of this study indicate that DLB can be clinicopathologically divided into a number of subtypes, that each subtype is preferentially correlated with some clinical feature, and that the neocortical type, common form, is the major type of DLB. |
| |
Keywords: | Alzheimer pathology clinicopathology dementia with Lewy bodies diagnostic criteria diffuse Lewy body disease immunohistochemistry Lewy body |
|
|