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1/11. Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in a case of suspected chronic heavy metal poisoning.

    We describe a patient who died of suspected heavy metal poisoning after a nine-month history of rapidly worsening dementia. autopsy at a forensic-pathological institute established the postmortem diagnosis of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) based on demonstration of the proteinase-resistant prion protein (PrPsSc) in Western-Blot on native brain tissue. Microscopic examination of the macroscopically largely inconspicuous brain revealed marked spongiform changes in the gray matter--mainly affecting the cerebral cortex, nucleus caudatus, and putamen--with confluent vacuoles. Patchy or perivacuolar deposits of PrPSc were found as well as granular PrPsc deposits. The cerebellum contained focal PrPsc deposits. There was an astrogliosis in the white matter and a proliferation of microglia in the gray matter with a simultaneous clear reduction in neuronal elements. The differential diagnosis is discussed, as is the potential risk to those performing autopsy on forensic cases with a clinical picture of rapidly progressing dementia, especially in cases where a prion disease is not initially suspected.
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2/11. Severe brain atrophy in a case of thalamic variant of sporadic CJD with plaque-like PrP deposition.

    A 30-year-old woman presented with ataxic gait and progressive mental deterioration, and 3 years later developed myoclonus in the limbs. Subsequently, she lapsed into an akinetic state and died more than 6 years after the onset of disease. The brain weighed 670 g, and preferential degeneration was found in the medial thalamus and the inferior olivary nucleus. In the cerebrum and cerebellum, gliosis and neuronal depletion were only mild and disintegration of the parenchymal structures was inconspicuous, despite pronounced atrophy. The patient had methionine homozygosity at codon 129 of the PrP gene and protease-resistant PrP type 2 in the brain. On PrP immunostaining, plaque-like deposits were detected in the cerebral and cerebellar cortices. Severe brain atrophy such as in the present case has never been described in the thalamic variant of sporadic CJD.
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3/11. MRI evidence of cerebellar and hippocampal involvement in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.

    We report a 51-year-old woman with the Brownell-Oppenheimer (cerebellar) variant of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD). She had the typical findings of bilateral basal ganglion changes on MRI, as well as changes in the cerebellum and hippocampus. This case adds further information to the known imaging characteristics of CJD.
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4/11. Extensive cortical damage in a case of Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease: clinicoradiological correlations.

    MRI demonstrated extensive cortical involvement in a patient with pathologically proven Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease. The whole brain was atrophic; some of the supratentorial cortex, putamen and caudate nucleus gave high signal on T2-weighted images; the changes were more extensive on diffusion-weighted images (DWI). Comparison of the history, and the sites of atrophy and signal change suggested that the latter predominates in regions with long-lasting damage and prevalent gliosis, while high signal on DWI indicate current neuronal loss. This case widens the range of MRI findings in patients with Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease, and suggests that some information about the progression of the disease can be extracted from single MRI study.
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5/11. MRI characteristics of sporadic CJD with valine homozygosity at codon 129 of the prion protein gene and PrPSc type 2 in japan.

    Two Japanese sporadic Creutzfeld-Jakob disease (sCJD) patients with valine homozygosity at codon 129 of the prion protein gene and protease-resistant prion protein (PrP(Sc)) type 2 (VV2) are described. In contrast with Western countries, this type of sCJD is very rare in japan. In 123 sCJD cases, only two were recognised as VV2 by the Japanese CJD surveillance committee. The clinical symptoms and pathological findings of the patients were similar to those of European and US patients. The noteworthy finding of diffusion weighted MRI (DWI) was that an abnormal high intensity covered a wide range of the thalamus including the dorsomedial nucleus, the pulvinar, and the ventral anterior, lateral, and posterolateral nuclei. This thalamic pattern has not been recognised in sCJD with methionine homozygosity and PrP(Sc) type 1 (MM1) or methionine/valine heterozygosity and PrP(Sc) type 1 (MV1) which comprises the vast majority of sCJD. This finding may be characteristic to VV2 and may distinguish it from MM1, MV1, and variant CJD. DWI can provide a very important clue for the antemortem diagnosis of VV2 subjects.
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6/11. Coexistence of CJD and Alzheimer's disease: an autopsy case showing typical clinical features of CJD.

    The present report concerns an autopsy case of CJD showing typical clinical features of CJD. The patient was a Japanese woman without hereditary burden or dementing disorder anamnesis who was 70-years-old at the time of death. She developed gait disturbance at age 68, followed by memory impairment, visual disturbance, and myoclonus. A neurological examination approximately 2 months after the disease onset revealed akinetic mutism, in addition to periodic synchronous discharges on electroencephalogram. Serial neuroradiological examinations disclosed progressive atrophy of the brain. She died of bronchopneumonia 25 months after the disease onset. The brain weighed 560 g (cerebrum 490 g, brainstem with cerebellum 70 g). Macroscopically, neuropathological examination showed prominent atrophy of the cerebrum, caudate nucleus, and cerebellum, in addition to necrosis of the cerebral white matter, compatible with panencephalopathic CJD. Histologically, there was neuronal loss with or without spongiform change in the cerebral cortex, parahippocampal gyrus, amygdala, striatum, pallidum, thalamus, pontine nucleus, and cerebellar granule cells, in addition to diffuse synaptic-type prion staining in the cerebrum and cerebellum. Furthermore, senile plaques, compatible with definite Consortium to establish a registry for Alzheimer's disease rank Alzheimer's disease, and neurofibrillary changes of the limbic system, consistent with stage IV of Braak's classification, were found. Based on these clinicopathological findings and a review of the published literature, it is concluded that there were two forms of coexistence of CJD and Alzheimer's disease in the same patient.
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7/11. Sporadic fatal insomnia with spongiform degeneration in the thalamus and widespread PrPSc deposits in the brain.

    We report a case of human prion disease of 29 months duration in a 74-year-old Japanese man. The disease started with progressive sleeplessness and dementia. MRI showed gradually progressive cerebral atrophy. Neuronal loss, spongiform change and gliosis were evident in the thalamus and cerebral cortex, as well as in the striatum and amygdaloid nucleus. In the cerebellar cortex, mild-to-moderate depletion of Pukinje cells and spongiform change were observed. Mild neuronal loss in the inferior olivary nucleus was also seen. immunohistochemistry revealed widespread perivacuolar deposits of abnormal prion protein (PrPsc) in the cerebral cortex, thalamus, basal ganglia, and brainstem, and minimal plaque-like deposits of PrPSc in the cerebellar cortex. In the cerebellar plaque-like deposits, the presence of amyloid fibrils was confirmed ultrastructurally. The entire pathology appeared to lie halfway between those of CJD and fatal insomnia, and further demonstrated the relationship between spongiform degeneration and PrPSc deposits, especially in the diseased thalamus. By immunoblotting, the thalamus was shown to contain the lowest amount of PrPSc among the brain regions examined. The PrPSc of type 2, in which the ratio of the three glycoforms was compatible with that of sporadic fatal insomnia (MM2-thalamic variant) reported previously, was also demonstrated. Analysis of the prion protein gene (PRNP) showed no mutation, and homozygosity for methionine at codon 129. In conclusion, we considered that this patient had been suffering from sporadic, pathologically atypical fatal insomnia.
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8/11. MM2-thalamic-type sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease with widespread neocortical pathology.

    We report an autopsy case of MM2-thalamic-type sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD) with widespread cerebral neocortical pathology. Initial symptoms were progressive insomnia and mental disturbance. magnetic resonance imaging revealed no high-signal intensity lesions on diffusion-weighted images and later showed gradually progressive cerebral atrophy. Periodic synchronous discharges and myoclonus were not observed. Upon neuropathologic examination, widespread cerebral neocortical involvement with fine vacuole-type spongiform change was observed. Severe degeneration with almost complete neuronal loss, tissue rarefaction, numerous fat-laden macrophages and hypertrophic astrocytosis of the medial thalamic nucleus was evident. The inferior olivary nucleus showed severe involvement with neuronal loss and hypertrophic astrocytosis. In the cerebellar cortex, moderate depletion of Purkinje neurons was evident, with no spongiform change in the molecular layer and no neuronal loss in the granule cell layer. immunohistochemistry for prion protein (PrP) revealed widespread synaptic-type deposits with some primitive plaque-type deposits in the cerebral neocortex, basal ganglia and cerebellar cortex. PrP deposition was also observed in the brainstem, particularly the tegmentum, substantia nigra and pontine nucleus, and spinal cord, particularly the posterior horn. In the medial thalamus and inferior olivary nucleus, PrP deposition was sparse. Analysis of the PrP gene showed no mutation but did show methionine homozygosity at polymorphic codon 129. Western blot analysis of protease-resistant PrP indicated the presence of type 2 PrP. We believe that this patient suffered from MM2-thalamic-type sCJD (sporadic fatal insomnia) with widespread cerebral neocortical pathology due to prolonged disease duration. The present case showed different patterns of spongiform degeneration and PrP deposition in the cerebral neocortex than those in previously reported MM2-thalamic-type sCJD cases.
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9/11. Neurone loss in the nucleus basalis of Meynert in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.

    In a man of 47 with a 2-month history of Creutzfeldt-Jakob-disease verified neuropathologically a morphometric study of the nucleus basalis of Meynert, the major source of cholinergic innervation of the cortex, revealed a neuronal loss of 45%. The degeneration of these neurones may provide the morphological substrate of the cortical cholinergic deficiency which has been reported in this condition. The six subpopulations of the nucleus basalis were affected in different degrees. Neuronal loss was most pronounced in those subpopulations which project to cortical areas most affected by spongiosis and neuronal loss. It is suggested that maintenance of the nucleus basalis complex is a necessary condition for higher cortical function.
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10/11. Demyelinating peripheral neuropathy with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and mutation at codon 200 of the prion protein gene.

    We performed a study of the distribution of PrP27-30, the proteinase-K-resistant form of prion protein, in the central and peripheral nervous system of a patient with a Glu200Lys mutation of the prion protein gene, cerebellar ataxia, subcortical dementia, rigidity, and demyelinating peripheral neuropathy. In the CNS, there was neuron loss and spongy degeneration, principally in the cerebellum, and with progressively lower density in the caudate nucleus, thalamus, temporal cortex, frontal cortex, and brainstem. Evaluation of the expression of PrP27-30 by Western blot showed that its distribution correlated with the intensity of the lesions in these regions. In contrast, we did not detect PrP27-30 in the peripheral nervous system where lesions consisted of demyelination, and remyelination that predominated in the proximal nerve trunks and roots.
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