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1.
Clinical and pathological studies have been conducted on two brothers with unusual encephalopathy of Binswanger's type. The disease started in the third decade with steady progressive course leading to death in eight or nine years. The clinical picture was summarized as a combination of organic dementia, extrapyramidal disorders associated with pseudobulbar symptoms and marked pyramidal tract signs. The blood pressure remained always normal during the course. Pathologically, there were diffuse and focal demyelination with sparing of U-fibers, multiple small foci of perivascular softening in the cerebral white matter and in the basal ganglia and severe arteriosclerotic changes of memingeal small arteries and long arteries with 100 to 400 micron caliber in the cerebral white matter. Vessel changes consisted of fibrous intimal proliferation, severe hyalinosis and splitting of intima and/or internal elastic membrane. The histopathological process belonged to the category of subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy of Binswanger's type. There has been some discussion as to differential diagnosis among various forms of vasculitis such as cerebral endangiitis obliterans, periarteritis nodosa, systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatic vascular disease and giant cell arteritis.  相似文献   

2.
Two adult siblings with early onset dementia are described. At presentation, in their early 30s, they showed poor judgment and disinhibition. A progressive dementia ensued over several years. Brain MRI disclosed diffusely increased T2 signal in the cerebral white matter, suggestive of a leukodystrophy. Numerous lysosomal enzyme assays including leucocyte arylsulphatase A and galactocerebrosidase activities, plasma and fibroblast very long chain fatty acid concentrations, and urinary sulphatide concentrations were normal, as were CSF analyses. A brain biopsy disclosed periodic acid Schiff (PAS) and Sudan black positive material in perivascular macrophages which, by electron microscopy, consisted of stacks of straight or curvilinear paired membranes within angulate lysosomes, indicative of abnormal glycolipid accumulation. The combination of clinical, radiological, biochemical, and pathological features of this degenerative disease is not consistent with that of any of the known leukodystrophies or lysosomal storage disorders. These findings suggest a previously undescribed familial glycolipid storage disorder causing an adult onset leukodystrophy and presenting with behavioural symptoms that mimic a psychiatric disorder.  相似文献   

3.
Stroke patients are more likely to develop dementia than age- and sex-matched controls but the pathogenesis of dementia remains unresolved in most of them. The aim of this review is to determine, from the available literature, the theoretical reasons for a stroke patient to become demented. We found three distinct factors that may explain the occurrence of dementia after a stroke. Firstly, post-stroke dementia may be the direct consequence of the vascular lesions of the brain: this is the most likely cause in patients with normal cognitive functions before a strategic infarct, especially in young patients, in Icelandic-type hereditary amyloid angiopathy and in cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leucoencephalopathy. Secondly, post-stroke dementia may be due to an associated asymptomatic Alzheimer pathology; the reasons for such an association are that (1) some cases of dementia occurring after a stroke are progressive and Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most frequent cause of progressive dementia; (2) age and APOE epsilon 4 genotype are risk factors for both AD and ischaemic stroke; (3) a vasculopathy is often associated with AD. Lastly, white matter changes may also contribute to dementia because they often indicate small-vessel disease and a higher risk of stroke recurrence, and may lead to slight cognitive impairment. Finally, the summation of vascular lesions of the brain, white matter changes, and Alzheimer pathology might lead to dementia, even when each type of lesion, on its own, is not severe enough to induce dementia. Therefore, in patients followed up after a stroke, the term "post-stroke dementia" is probably more appropriate than that of vascular dementia because it includes all possible causal factors.  相似文献   

4.
Vascular dementia is actually considered as a ill-defined entity. The clinical and neuropathologic criteria of this multifactorial disorder remain uncertain. Although not widely accepted, the introduction of the concept of incomplete infarction in the brain can help to explain some particular types of vascular dementia. In the hypoxic-hypoperfusion dementia syndromes of cerebral cortex and white matter and in lacunar state dementia, which are the most common types of vascular dementia, areas of incomplete infarction co-exist with regions of complete infarction. Although initially rejected by early positron emission tomographic studies, it can now be demonstrated that these incomplete infarction areas reflect chronic ischaemia of the brain and that they are relevant to the pathogenesis of vascular dementia.  相似文献   

5.
A 44-year-old Japanese man was diagnosed as having late adult-onset dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy (DRPLA), whose CAG repeats in the DRPLA gene were 60 and 15. He developed gait disturbance, limb ataxia, pyramidal tract signs, dementia, and psychiatric symptoms including character changes within a few years of the above diagnosis. His T 2-weighted brain MRI showed symmetric high-signal lesions in the cerebral white matter and brain stem, in addition to cerebellar, brain stem, and cerebral cortical atrophy. Since the results of RI cisternography indicated that he manifested the clinical features of normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH), V-P shunt operation was done. In a week after the operation, his gait disturbance, pyramidal tract signs, dementia and psychiatric symptoms were remarkably improved. White matter lesions have been thought to be concomitant with late adult-onset DRPLA patients, but some of these patients may have characteristics of NPH pathophysiology.  相似文献   

6.
Regional cerebral blood flow and amino acid concentration in the cerebrospinal fluid were studied in 12 cases of vascular dementia, 12 cases of Alzheimer's disease, 12 cases of chronic alcoholism, and 12 age-matched healthy controls. In vascular dementia, blood flows were decreased in the cerebral cortex, frontal white matter, thalamus, caudate nucleus, and putamen and alpha-aminobutyric acid and glutamic acid concentrations were increased in the cerebrospinal fluid. In Alzheimer's disease, blood flows were decreased in the frontal cortex, parietal cortex, temporal cortex, and frontal white matter and alanine concentration was increased in the cerebrospinal fluid. In chronic alcoholism, blood flows were decreased in the cerebral cortex, thalamus, and putamen and urea, alanine, and glycine concentrations were increased in the cerebrospinal fluid.  相似文献   

7.
We report here an autopsy case of Binswanger's disease (BD) without hypertension and associated with cerebral infarction in the terminal stage. The female patient, who was 74 years old at the time of death, had initially demonstrated manic-depressive disorder-like mental disorder, followed by dementia and neurological deficits. A brain CT scan showed white matter low attenuation bilaterally and symmetrically. BD was clinically diagnosed despite the lack of hypertension. In the terminal stage, she suffered an infarction in the left anterior cerebral artery region, and died of pneumonia. Neuropathologically, we found the infarction of the left anterior cerebral artery region, demyelination, fibrillary gliosis, lacunae and arteriosclerosis of the small arteries and arterioles in the white matter.  相似文献   

8.
OBJECTIVES: To better define the neuropathology of vascular dementia. METHODS: The neuropathological findings in 18 elderly, undemented subjects free of cerebrovascular disease were compared with 19 elderly undemented subjects who had cerebrovascular disease (many of whom had had a "stroke") and 24 elderly demented subjects who had cerebrovascular disease, but no other pathology to account for dementia. Cases in all groups were selected for absence or no more than very mild Alzheimer type pathology. RESULTS: Microvascular brain damage in the form of severe cribriform change and associated subcortical white matter damage and microinfarction were correlated with a history of dementia. Severe cribriform change was much more common and microinfarction somewhat more common in the demented group with vascular disease than the undemented group with vascular disease (P=0.0006 and P=0.031 respectively). Other findings of note were that congophilic angiopathy had a greater prevalence in the vascular dementia group than the control group, single cerebral infarcts were more common in the group who were undemented with vascular disease than in the group with dementia and vascular disease (P=0.0028), and the last group lacked evidence of macroscopic infarction more often than the first (P=0.034). There was a non-significant trend for the ratio of infarcted:uninfarcted tissue in one cerebral hemisphere to be higher in the group with dementia and vascular disease than in the group with vascular disease but no dementia. CONCLUSIONS: Microvascular disease, not macroscopic infarction, was the chief substrate of vascular dementia in this series of cases.  相似文献   

9.
10.
A 35-year-old man died after 30 months following the onset of the disease. There was a history of changes in his mental condition, including disturbances of behavior as well as the evidence of progressing dementia. The patient revealed gait disturbances and finally became bed ridden. Bizarre behavior and changes of mood with concurrent growing irritability which predominated during the course of disease, may explain the initial diagnosis of schizophrenia. Then cerebellar and spastic movement disorders leading to paraparesis and sphincters disturbances developed. Clinical symptoms of adrenal failure were not found apart from episodes of arterial pressure fall. After two years a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed an extensive diffuse demyelinative process in white matter of cerebral and cerebellar hemispheres. Activity of lysosomal enzymes was normal. A general autopsy revealed atrophy of adrenal cortex and the presence of ballooned cells with striated cytoplasm in the reticular and fasciculate zones. Neuropathological examination revealed an extensive demyelination of white matter in cerebral and cerebellar hemispheres and of the long paths of the brain stem, corresponding to changes in MRI examination. Within demyelination areas damage of axons and diffuse cellular and fibrous gliosis were found as well as perivascular lymphocytic infiltrations with the presence of strong PAS (+) and Sudan (+) macrophages. Immunocytochemical reactions with HAM-56 and RCA1 in macrophages were positive. Electron microscopy examination revealed lamellar inclusions in cytoplasm of macrophages. Similar structures were present in the lysosomes of astrocytes. Morphological examination of adrenal glands as well as morphological and ultrastructural study of the brain allowed us to diagnose the cerebral form of adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD). Topography and character of the brain changes seems to be in keeping with a rare schizophrenic-like variant of ALD with progressive dementia. Abnormal plasma profile and increased VLCFA concentration in the patient's 13-year-old daughter confirm the ALD diagnosis.  相似文献   

11.
The authors examined the relationship between psychiatric symptoms and the presence of of MR deep white matter lesions (DWMLs) in 28 probable Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients with mild to moderate dementia. The difference in frequency of psychiatric symptoms between patients with and without DWMLs was not statistically significant. However, MR global scores of severity correlated with the presence of ideational disturbances (such as low self-esteem and suicidal ideation). Analysis of specific cerebral regions indicated that the highest correlation occurred in the frontal white matter. Thus, DWMLs are correlated with specific symptoms of depression in AD. Whether DWMLs are etiologically related to these symptoms remains to be determined.  相似文献   

12.
Pathogenesis of leukoaraiosis: a review   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
BACKGROUND: Changes in the cerebral hemispheric white matter, detectable with increasing frequency by modern neuroimaging methods, are associated with aging and conceivably may contribute to the development of specific cognitive deficits. The pathogenesis of these cerebral white matter abnormalities (sometimes described as leukoaraiosis) is unknown. This review evaluates the available evidence in support of the hypothesis that the etiology of leukoaraiosis is related to a specific type of cerebral ischemia and highlights mechanisms by which ischemic injury to the brain may induce selected structural alterations limited to the cerebral white matter. SUMMARY OF REVIEW: The review is based on the critical analysis of over 100 publications (most appearing in the last decade) dealing with the anatomy and physiology of the arterial circulation to the cerebral white matter and with the pathogenesis of leukoaraiosis. CONCLUSIONS: A significant number of clues support the hypothesis that some types of leukoaraiosis may be the result of ischemic injury to the brain. Structural changes affecting the small intraparenchymal cerebral arteries and arterioles that are associated with aging and with stroke risk factors, altered cerebral blood flow autoregulation, and the conditions created by the unique arterial blood supply of the hemispheric white matter each seem to contribute to the development of leukoaraiosis. To the best of our ability to interpret current information, the type of ischemic injury that is most likely responsible for these white matter changes involves transient repeated events characterized by moderate drops in regional cerebral blood flow that induce an incomplete form of infarction. This hypothesis could be tested in appropriate experimental models.  相似文献   

13.
Senile dementia of the Binswanger's type is a term used to describe a dementia syndrome characterized by onset in the sixth or seventh decade of life, subcortical neurologic deficits, psychiatric disorders and evidence of hypertension or systemic vascular disease. The status of senile dementia of the Binswanger's type as a distinct entity is a matter of some controversy. The array of neuroimaging abnormalities and clinical findings attributed to this condition overlap with a number of other neuropathologies. Leukoaraiosis, or attenuation of subcortical white matter, seen on computed tomographic scans or magnetic resonance imaging of the brain, is a hallmark of senile dementia of the Binswanger's type. The clinical findings associated with Binswanger's disease are varied but typically include a progressive dementia, depression and "subcortical" dysfunction such as gait abnormalities, rigidity and neurogenic bladder. Treatment is largely supportive and includes a discussion about advanced directives, social support and antidepressant therapy. Control of hypertension and aspirin prophylaxis may help prevent further progression of white matter disease.  相似文献   

14.
We studied changes in cerebral perfusion and oxygen metabolism to elucidate the pathophysiological nature and clinical significance of white matter hyperintensities in Alzheimer's disease (AD). METHODS: Sixteen AD patients (age 71.6 +/- 3.1 yr) whose T2-weighted MR images showed white matter hyperintensities, and 16 age-matched AD patients (age 71.0 +/- 4.3 yr) without white matter hyperintensities were compared. Regional cerebral blood flow (CBF), oxygen metabolism (CMRO2) and oxygen extraction fraction (OEF) were measured by using (15)O steady-state method and PET. RESULTS: There was no significant difference in cognitive impairment between the two groups. Compared to the patients without white matter hyperintensities, those with them had significantly low CBF values and significantly high OEF values in all cortical and white matter regions. However, there were no significant differences in CMRO2 values between the two groups. Severity of white matter hyperintensities correlated with the mean cortical and mean white matter OEF. CONCLUSION: In AD patients, white matter hyperintensities on T2-weighted MR images represent ischemic changes in which oxygen metabolism and function are fairly compensated. These changes are not disease-specific but are age-associated coincidences, as in normal aging with or without vascular risk factors.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Periventricular leukomalacia in the premature infant is a lesion of cerebral white matter with its greatest period of risk when white matter is immature, that is, when oligodendrocyte precursors are proliferating and differentiating, and before myelin sheaths are actively synthesized. Although the pathogenesis of perinatal cerebral white matter damage involves multiple factors, the correlation of the timing of the lesion with dominance of oligodendrocyte precursors in cerebral white matter suggests that intrinsic factors related to oligodendrocyte precursors are critical. Ischemia and infection have both been implicated as causes of perinatal white matter damage. Major mechanisms underlying oligodendrocyte injury in ischemia include glutamate toxicity, free-radical injury, and cytokine damage mediated by macrophages accompanying ischemia-induced inflammation. Factors related to a vulnerability of immature oligodendrocytes to ischemia potentially include a developmental lack of antioxidant enzymes to mediate oxidative stress. Cytokine-mediated injury to oligodendrocytes is also potentially important. A complete understanding of the role of immature white matter in the pathogenesis of periventricular leukomalacia is essential for developing strategies to prevent it.  相似文献   

17.
OBJECTIVE: We describe the clinical, molecular, genetic, MRI, and SPECT features of a German family with autosomal dominant migraine and dementia, mapping to the cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL) locus. We studied the correlation of cerebral blood flow, MRI, and cognitive function. BACKGROUND: CADASIL is a small-vessel disease of the brain mapped to chromosome 19p13.1. Mutations of the Notch3 gene cause this disorder. Most phenotypes are characterized by transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) and lacunar strokes leading to dementia. Migraine is frequent. A single photon emission computed tomographic (SPECT) study of this disorder has not yet been published. METHODS: We studied 13 individuals clinically and performed neuroimaging studies with MRI and SPECT. RESULTS: Genetic analysis strongly supported linkage to the CADASIL locus, and the disease haplotype was found in six individuals. Analysis by single-strand confirmation polymorphism did not identify Notch3 mutations. All affected individuals had MRI white matter hyperintensities and four individuals had additional basal ganglial signal abnormalities. Four affected individuals had migraine, two of whom had slowly progressive dementia. TIAs, stroke, and focal neurologic signs were absent. Cerebral blood flow reduction in SPECT studies of affected individuals matched with MRI signal abnormalities. Cognitive impairment was linked to signal abnormalities and hypoperfusion in the basal ganglia. Demented patients had a pattern of frontal, temporal, and basal ganglial hypoperfusion. CONCLUSIONS: We describe a CADASIL phenotype that is characterized by the absence of focal neurologic symptoms and present the first SPECT study of this disorder.  相似文献   

18.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the relationship of brain infarction to the clinical expression of Alzheimer disease (AD). DESIGN: Cognitive function and the prevalence of dementia were determined for participants in the Nun Study who later died. At autopsy, lacunar and larger brain infarcts were identified, and senile plaques and neurofibrillary tangles in the neocortex were quantitated. Participants with abundant senile plaques and some neurofibrillary tangles in the neocortex were classified as having met the neuropathologic criteria for AD. SETTING: Convents in the Midwestern, Eastern, and Southern United States. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 102 college-educated women aged 76 to 100 years. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Cognitive function assessed by standard tests and dementia and AD assessed by clinical and neuropathologic criteria. RESULTS: Among 61 participants who met the neuropathologic criteria for AD, those with brain infarcts had poorer cognitive function and a higher prevalence of dementia than those without infarcts. Participants with lacunar infarcts in the basal ganglia, thalamus, or deep white matter had an especially high prevalence of dementia, compared with those without infarcts (the odds ratio [OR] for dementia was 20.7, 95% confidence interval [95% CI], 1.5-288.0). Fewer neuropathologic lesions of AD appeared to result in dementia in those with lacunar infarcts in the basal ganglia, thalamus, or deep white matter than in those without infarcts. In contrast, among 41 participants who did not meet the neuropathologic criteria for AD, brain infarcts were only weakly associated with poor cognitive function and dementia. Among all 102 participants, atherosclerosis of the circle of Willis was strongly associated with lacunar and large brain infarcts. CONCLUSION: These findings suggest that cerebrovascular disease may play an important role in determining the presence and severity of the clinical symptoms of AD.  相似文献   

19.
A 65 year old woman, referred for differential diagnosis of dementia, presented with cognitive and mnestic deficits. Typical signs and symptoms of hypothyroidism led to the diagnosis of severe autoimmune thyroiditis. After six months of treatment with thyroid hormone, dementia, myopathy and ataxia had disappeared. The neurologic and neuropsychologic manifestations of hypothyroidism are discussed. In dementia the diagnosis of secondary and reversible forms is of great importance with regard to prognosis and treatment. Hypothyroidism is known to be a common and treatable cause of pseudodementia. Early diagnosis and adequate treatment are important to prevent further permanent deterioration of cerebral function.  相似文献   

20.
Maple syrup urine disease (MSUD) is an inherited metabolic disorder characterised by a severe, usually lethal, neonatal course unless dietary intake of branched chain amino acids is restricted. We describe a patient with MSUD who had computed tomography (CT) changes of diffuse white matter hypodensity, particularly in the deep white cerebellar matter, brain stem, cerebral peduncles, thalamus and posterior limb of the internal capsule. With dietary treatment, there was neurological improvement with simultaneous disappearance of the oedema. These CT changes are typical of MSUD, hence are relevant findings in the neuroradiologic differential diagnosis of a possible metabolic disorder.  相似文献   

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