首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Coexistence of Alzheimer-type neuropathology in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
Authors:Johannes A. Hainfellner  J. Wanschitz  Kurt Jellinger  P. P. Liberski  Filippo Gullotta  H. Budka
Affiliation:Institute of Neurology, University of Vienna, and Austrian Reference Center for Human Prion Diseases, AKH, W?hringer Gürtel 18-20, POB 48, A-1097 Wien, Austria e-mail: H.Budka@akh-wien.ac.at, Tel.: +43-1-40400-5501 or -5573, Fax: +43-1-40400-5511 or -5573, AT
L. B. Institute for Clinical Neurobiology, PKH and Lainz Hospital, Vienna, Austria, AT
Institute of Neuropathology, Münster, Germany, DE
Abstract:Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) and Alzheimer’s disease (AD) share clinical, neuropathological, and pathogenetic features. To investigate eventual mutual influences, we screened prominently affected neocortex from 110 neuropathologically proven CJD patients for Alzheimer-type pathology with anti-β/A4, Bielschowsky and anti-tau (immuno)stains. The neuropathological classification of Alzheimer-type pathology was made according to the CERAD criteria. Results were controlled by comparison with Alzheimer-type changes in sections from the same cortical areas in 110 sex- and age-matched non-demented control patients. For comparison, the control patients were also classified according to the CERAD neuropathology criteria as if they had been demented. Alzheimer-type tissue changes as in definite and probable CERAD AD occur in 10.9% of the CJD patients and 19.1% of control patients (P = 0.11). The median age of CJD and control patients with CERAD AD is 72 and 68 years, respectively, which differs significantly from the median ages of 64 and 63 years, respectively, in the non-AD/CJD and non-AD control patients. Since CERAD criteria include “presence of other neuropathological lesions likely to cause dementia”, an AD diagnosis in CJD patients (all of whom are demented) is solely based on densities of neuritic plaques. Similar Alzheimer-type changes in even higher frequency, however, are also present in elderly non-demented controls. Thus, the coexistence of Alzheimer-type pathology in CJD most likely represents an age-related change. Deposits of prion protein (PrP) frequently accumulate at the periphery of β/A4 plaques. The presence of β/A4 amyloid in the brain may influence PrP morphogenesis. Received: 18 November 1997 / Revised, accepted: 11 February 1998
Keywords:Alzheimer’  s disease  Creutzfeldt-Jakob  disease  Dementia  Neuropathology  Prion disease
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号