Cases reported "Lewy Body Disease"

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1/61. Familial dementia with lewy bodies (DLB).

    We report a rare familial case of dementia with lewy bodies (DLB). The patient was a man who died at the age of 51. His parents were first cousins. Among three siblings, two were diagnosed as probable cases of DLB, and one was a possible case, according to the clinical diagnostic criteria of the consortium on DLB. Following the patient's autopsy, he was found to have had DLB without neurofibrillary tangles or senile plaques (pure form of diffuse lewy body disease). His other siblings have been followed for more than ten years. Although these patients with familial DLB displayed clinical variability, all three siblings showed progressive dementia of early onset and progressive language disorder with paraphasia and difficulty in finding words. Psychotic features were also seen in the three siblings. The patient's sister showed compulsive behavior, and the other two siblings showed symptoms of parkinsonism. Neuropathologically, in addition to the usual neuropathology of DLB, the autopsy findings showed numerous small spheroids in the stratum pyramidale from the subiculum to CA1 of the hippocampus. Significant neuronal loss in CA2-3 of the hippocampus was detected. Axonal flow disturbance may be involved in the hippocampal formations of this incidence of familial DLB.
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2/61. Diffuse lewy body disease: clinical, pathological, and neuropsychological review.

    The pathophysiological etiologies and clinical presentations of neurodegenerative dementias have been found to be complex and heterogeneous. Recently, Lewy body inclusions have been identified as an etiological factor in 20-34% of autopsied dementia cases. The term diffuse lewy body disease (DLBD) is generally accepted as the diagnostic term representative of this currently under-reported and under-recognized disease. This article reviews the literature on the clinical, pathological, and neuropsychological features of this disorder. Differential diagnostic issues are discussed as well as current pharmacological treatment. Nine confirmed cases of DLBD are presented to demonstrate the various features of this disorder. The diagnostic implications of neuropsychological examination results are discussed in relation to other common dementing neurologic diseases.
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3/61. Electrophysiological observations in hereditary parkinsonism-dementia with Lewy body pathology.

    We studied the only two living affected individuals who are part of a previously reported kindred that expresses a hereditary parkinsonism-dementia syndrome with Lewy body pathology. The electrophysiological characteristics of the hyperkinetic movement disorders in these patients were examined to provide physiological insights into the clinical phenotype of this syndrome. Evaluation of both patients showed 7-9 Hz electromyographic discharges in upper extremity muscles during postural activation, and one patient showed a 4-5 Hz discharge pattern correlating to a rest tremor. Brief (<50 ms) myoclonic electromyographic discharges were seen in both patients, and a time-locked relationship to a focal cortical premovement electroencephalographic potential was elicited in one patient. Somatosensory evoked potentials were not enlarged and long latency reflexes were not enhanced. electroencephalography was normal in one patient but showed pathologic slow frequencies in the other. The electrophysiological findings show evolution which correlates with an apparent characteristic evolution of hyperkinetic movement disorders that accompanies the severe progression of parkinsonism-dementia in this kindred. These results have implications for the future study of this and similar syndromes.
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4/61. Distinctive neuropathology revealed by alpha-synuclein antibodies in hereditary parkinsonism and dementia linked to chromosome 4p.

    The identification of the alpha-synuclein gene on chromosome 4q as a locus for familial Lewy-body parkinsonism and of alpha-synuclein as a component of lewy bodies has heralded a new era in the study of Parkinson's disease. We have identified a large family with Lewy body parkinsonism linked to a novel locus on chromosome 4p15 that does not have a mutation in the alpha-synuclein gene. Here we report the clinical and neuropathological findings in an individual from this family and describe unusual high molecular weight alpha-synuclein-immunoreactive proteins in brain homogenates from brain regions with the most marked neuropathology. Distinctive histopathology was revealed with alpha-synuclein immunostaining, including pleomorphic lewy bodies, synuclein-positive glial inclusions and widespread, severe neuritic dystrophy. We also discuss the relationship of this familial disorder to a lewy body disease clinical spectrum, ranging from Parkinson's disease to dementia with psychosis.
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5/61. risperidone, neuroleptic malignant syndrome and probable dementia with lewy bodies.

    1. Conflicting reports are available regarding the sensitivity of patients with dementia with lewy bodies (DLB) to risperidone. 2. The authors studied a rare familial case of probable DLB, who developed a documented episode of neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS) following the exposure to risperidone. Previously, the patient had had an episode of NMS on trifluoperazine. 3. The discontinuance of risperidone, in combination with a mild increase of dopaminergic therapy, led to a complete recovery in few days. 4. In patients with DLB, a continued vigilance for extrapyramidal side effects, including NMS, would be advisable during the use of risperidone.
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6/61. dementia with lewy bodies: a pure case.

    A pure case of autopsy-confirmed dementia with lewy bodies (DLB) is described. The patient presented with distinctive verbal fluency deficits in the context of mild language impairment, intact recognition memory, and impaired paragraph recall. neuroimaging (CT and SPECT) showed progressive medial temporal lobe atrophy. Neuropathology revealed lewy bodies, degeneration in the substantia nigra, nucleus basalis of Meynert (Nakano & Hirano, 1984), and locus ceruleus, but no pathology characteristic of Alzheimer's disease. It is in this sense that the case is "pure" DLB. Early neuropsychological diagnosis of DLB is essential (salmon et al., 1996) given the potentially fatal hazard of neuroleptics (McKeith et al., 1992) and the difficulties associated with clinical neurological diagnoses (Litvan et al., 1998).
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7/61. The pathology of rem sleep behavior disorder with comorbid Lewy body dementia.

    A patient with rem sleep behavior disorder who subsequently developed probable Lewy body dementia is now reported to have a definite pathologic diagnosis of Lewy body dementia. Examination of brain revealed lewy bodies as well as marked neuronal loss in brainstem monoaminergic nuclei-particularly locus coeruleus and substantia nigra-that inhibit cholinergic neurons in the pedunculopontine nucleus mediating atonia during REM sleep.
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8/61. FDG positron emission tomography in diffuse lewy body disease: a case report.

    lewy body disease is a clinicopathologic condition that includes Parkinson's disease at one end and diffuse lewy body disease at the other hand. The latter is often associated with progressive cognitive deterioration, levodopa-responsive parkinsonism, fluctuations of cognitive and motor functions, and visual and auditory hallucinations. In addition, it can be a familial disease. Clinical and positron emission tomographic findings are described in a patient with atypical dementia and movement disorder and a pathologically proved diagnosis of diffuse lewy body disease.
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9/61. Improvement in sundowning in dementia with lewy bodies after treatment with donepezil.

    Sundowning, manifested as a recurring increase in restlessness and agitation in the evening, is described in a 71-year-old man with clinically diagnosed dementia with lewy bodies. An objective measure of activity using the activity electronic monitoring technique indicated a marked increase in activity level during the evening compared to earlier in the day. After treatment with donepezil, a cholinesterase inhibitor, ratings of behavioural symptoms improved. In addition, there was a marked reduction in evening activity and an increase in daytime activity. cognition and parkinsonism also improved. Possible explanations for this finding are discussed.
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10/61. Successful use of donepezil for the treatment of dementia with lewy bodies.

    OBJECTIVE: To report a case of the successful use of donepezil for treatment of cognitive and noncognitive symptoms in a patient with dementia with lewy bodies. CASE SUMARY: An 86-year-old white woman with dementia was experiencing early-onset significant fluctuation of her cognitive status, functional impairment, visual hallucinations, aggression, and parkinsonism. She was intially diagnosed with alzheimer disease and Parkinsons disease and prescribed donepezil 5 mg/d and benztropine 1 mg twice daily. On reexamination of the case by a neurologist, the diagnoses were revised to dementia with lewy bodies. The benztropine was discontinued, and donepezil was increased to 10 mg/d. The patient's cognitive and functional status significantly improved, as did her visual hallucinations. DISCUSSION: This case supports previous reports of the marked responsiveness of patients with dementia with lewy bodies to acetylcholinesterase inhibitors. This may be explained by the marked cholinergic deficit observed in patients with dementia with lewy bodies and the evidence linking cognitive as well as noncognitive symptoms to this deficit. CONCLUSIONS: The present case suggests that patients with dementia with lewy bodies respond well to acetylcholinesterase inhibitors. Controlled trials are necessary to further define the role of these drugs for this disease.
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