首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
检索        


The dorsal raphe nucleus shows phospho‐tau neurofibrillary changes before the transentorhinal region in Alzheimer's disease. A precocious onset?
Authors:L T Grinberg      U Rüb§  R E L Ferretti    R Nitrini  J M Farfel    L Polichiso    K Gierga‡‡  W Jacob-Filho¶  H Heinsen‡  Brazilian Brain Bank Study Group
Institution:Departments of Pathology and;Neurology,;Division of Geriatrics,;Instituto Israelita de Ensino e Pesquisa Albert Einstein, São Paulo, Brazil;;Morphological Brain Research Unit, Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Julius Maximilians University, Würzburg,;Institute of Clinical Neuroanatomy, J. W. Goethe University, Frankfurt/Main, and;Department of Neuropathology, Heinrich-Heine-University, Düsseldorf, Germany
Abstract:Aims:  Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive and irreversible disease. There is strong evidence that the progression of the phospho-tau neurofibrillary cytoskeletal changes, rather than the β-amyloid burden, is crucial in determining the severity of the dementia in AD. The Braak and Braak staging system (BB) focuses mainly on the cortical cytoskeletal pathology and classifies this progressive pathology into six stages, spreading from the transentorhinal region to primary cortices. Although it is reported elsewhere that the midbrain's dorsal raphe nucleus (DR), which is connected with those areas of the cerebral cortex undergoing early changes during BB I and II, exhibits AD-related cytoskeletal pathology, this nucleus has not been considered by the BB. Methods:  To determine during which BB stage and how frequently the DR is affected by AD-related neurofibrillary changes, we studied the DR of 118 well-characterized individuals of the Brain Bank of the Brazilian Aging Brain Study Group categorized according to the BB. Thirty-eight of these individuals were staged as BB = 0, and 80 as BB ≥ 1. Results:  In all of the BB ≥ 1 individuals (cortical neurofibrillary changes were present at least in the transentorhinal region) and in more than 1/5 of the BB = 0 individuals neurofibrillary changes were detected in the supratrochlear subnucleus of the DR. Conclusions:  These observations: (i) support the hypothesis of transneuronal spread of neurofibrillary changes from the DR to its interconnected cortical brain areas; and (ii) indicate that the supratrochlear subnucleus of the DR is affected by neurofibrillary changes before the transentorhinal cortex during the disease process underlying AD.
Keywords:Alzheimer's disease  Braak and Braak staging  brainstem  cytoskeletal pathology  raphe nuclei  tau protein
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