Cases reported "Dementia"

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1/31. Vasculopathic changes of cadasil can be focal in skin biopsies.

    Cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (cadasil) is a newly described cause of vascular dementia. Pathologic examination shows multiple small infarcts in the deep cerebral white matter together with a nonatherosclerotic, nonamyloid angiopathy involving the media of small cerebral arteries. Ultrastructurally, characteristic granular material is present in the basal lamina of vascular smooth muscle cells in cerebral and extracerebral blood vessels. The ultrastructural changes have also been demonstrated in skin biopsies of affected patients; consequently, some investigators have recently recommended skin biopsies for the diagnosis of cadasil. This study describes a 54-year-old male with a family history for strokes who had clinical and radiological features suggestive of cadasil. A skin biopsy was performed to confirm the diagnosis. Initially, the characteristic vasculopathic changes of cadasil were not identified within small blood vessel walls. However, multiple deeper sections in other areas showed electron-dense material associated with vascular smooth muscle cells, characteristic of cadasil. Subsequent genetic testing demonstrated a single nucleotide substitution at position 659 on chromosome 19p13.1 causing an amino-acid change (Cys --> Phe), a finding indicative of cadasil. The involvement of blood vessels within the dermis makes skin biopsy a useful adjunct in the diagnosis of cadasil. However, as illustrated by this case, the findings may be focal, requiring a thorough evaluation of the entire biopsy specimen.
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2/31. The neurological masquerade of intravascular lymphomatosis.

    BACKGROUND: Intravascular lymphomatosis (IVL) is an uncommon systemic disease characterized by occlusion of small vessels by malignant lymphomatous cells. central nervous system involvement usually presents as subacute encephalopathy, dementia, seizures, or multifocal cerebrovascular events. OBJECTIVE: To increase awareness about IVL, an uncommon cause of neurological disease. DESIGN: This is a retrospective case series of 8 pathologically proved cases of IVL with neurological disease. patients were part of a pathological series collected between April 1962 and October 1998 at indiana University School of medicine and the Armed Forces Institute of pathology, washington, DC. SETTING: Neurological and neuropathological examinations were performed at tertiary referral hospitals. patients: Eleven patients were diagnosed pathologically as having IVL, but 3 were not included in this evaluation because of a lack of appropriate clinical information. Of the final sample (n = 8), there were 4 men and 4 women (mean /- SD age, 62.9 /- 9.9 years). RESULTS: All 8 patients had focal neurological deficits, 7 had encephalopathy or dementia, 5 had epileptic seizures, and 2 had myelopathy. death occurred at a mean of 7.7 months (range, 1-24 months) after the onset of symptoms. All patients had elevated cerebrospinal fluid protein levels, 4 had pleocytosis, and 2 had an elevated IgG level in their cerebrospinal fluid. Of the 4 patients who underwent a brain biopsy, 1 was diagnosed as having IVL before death. CONCLUSIONS: Intravascular lymphomatosis is an uncommon disease with a myriad of potential neurological manifestations. diagnosis requires a high index of suspicion and a pathological examination. If diagnosed early, aggressive chemotherapy is potentially curative, although the overall prognosis remains dismal.
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3/31. Familial Danish dementia: a novel form of cerebral amyloidosis associated with deposition of both amyloid-Dan and amyloid-beta.

    Familial Danish dementia (FDD) is pathologically characterized by widespread cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA), parenchymal protein deposits, and neurofibrillary degeneration. FDD is associated with a mutation of the BRI2 gene located on chromosome 13. In FDD there is a decamer duplication, which abolishes the normal stop codon, resulting in an extended precursor protein and the release of an amyloidogenic fragment, ADan. The aim of this study was to describe the major neuropathological changes in FDD and to assess the distribution of ADan lesions, neurofibrillary pathology, glial, and microglial response using conventional techniques, immunohistochemistry, confocal microscopy, and immunoelectron microscopy. We showed that ADan is widely distributed in the central nervous system (CNS) in the leptomeninges, blood vessels, and parenchyma. A predominance of parenchymal pre-amyloid (non-fibrillary) lesions was found. Abeta was also present in a proportion of both vascular and parenchymal lesions. There was severe neurofibrillary pathology, and tau immunoblotting revealed a triplet electrophoretic migration pattern comparable with PHF-tau. FDD is a novel form of CNS amyloidosis with extensive neurofibrillary degeneration occurring with parenchymal, predominantly pre-amyloid rather than amyloid, deposition. These findings support the notion that parenchymal amyloid fibril formation is not a prerequisite for the development of neurofibrillary tangles. The significance of concurrent ADan and Abeta deposition in FDD is under further investigation.
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4/31. Late-onset neuroaxonal leucoencephalopathy with spheroids and vascular amyloid.

    A 54-year-old man with a 7-year history of early-onset, slowly progressive dementia and motor impairment characterised by diffuse, non-enhancing white matter signal change. Neuropathologic examination demonstrated subcortical pigmentation with neuroaxonal spheroid formation, profound axonal loss with secondary myelin degeneration and widespread betaA4 immunopositivity involving meningeal and subcortical vessels. There was relative sparing of brain stem and cerebellar white matter. The neocortex was normal. The appearances expand the spectrum of adult-onset neuroaxonal leucoencephalopathy with spheroids (NALS) and demonstrate that vascular betaA4 amyloid plays a key role in the white matter pathology of NALS.
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5/31. Treatment-induced leukoencephalopathy in primary CNS lymphoma: a clinical and autopsy study.

    BACKGROUND: Treatment-related leukoencephalopathy is the leading toxicity after successful treatment of primary CNS lymphoma (PCNSL). Its mechanism is poorly understood and there are no autopsy data available on such patients. methods: From a database of immunocompetent patients with PCNSL diagnosed between 1985 and 2001, the authors identified five autopsied patients who died of leukoencephalopathy. The authors reviewed their clinical records, MRI, and autopsy findings. RESULTS: The median age was 74 years (range 41 to 79) at PCNSL diagnosis. Symptoms of neurotoxicity developed a median of 1 month after treatment completion, and median survival was 30 months (range 22 to 68 months) after neurotoxicity onset. All had white matter hyperintensity on T2-weighted MRI, and two developed enhancing lesions 5 and 14 months following completion of treatment. At autopsy no PCNSL was identified. Myelin and axonal loss, gliosis, pallor, spongiosis, and rarefaction of the white matter were found in all; two patients had tissue necrosis that correlated with the enhancement on MRI, and one had fibrinoid necrosis of vessels. Four of the five patients had atherosclerosis of large cerebral vessels in the circle of willis and all had small vessel disease; two had recent strokes at autopsy. CONCLUSIONS: Treatment-induced leukoencephalopathy is not a late delayed consequence of neurotoxic treatment but can be seen very early in some patients. Vascular disease may be a component of this white matter injury.
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6/31. Binswanger's disease in the absence of chronic arterial hypertension. A case report with clinical, radiological and immunohistochemical observations on intracerebral blood vessels.

    The cerebral changes are described in a woman of 54 who suffered from Binswanger's encephalopathy: there were no signs or symptoms of chronic arterial hypertension. The disease presented as dementia of about 3 years duration. Computed tomography of the brain 2.5 years before her death showed bilateral widespread hypodense lesions in the cerebral white matter. She died of an asthmatic attack. autopsy disclosed extensive bilateral degeneration of the central white matter, lacunes and gliosis. Severe obliterative arteriolosclerosis occurred in the meningeal vessels and those supplying the affected parts of the brain. light microscopy showed that the most severe lesions occurred in the arterioles. immunohistochemistry demonstrated profound extravasation of plasma proteins chiefly albumin, indicating dysfunction of the blood-brain barrier. Thus, the lesions characteristic of Binswanger's encephalopathy may develop in the absence of chronic arterial hypertension. Additional pathogenic factors, possibly genetic predisposition to vascular injury may play a role in the development of this condition.
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keywords = blood vessel, vessel
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7/31. October 2004: a 49-year-old man with progressive dementia.

    October 2004. A 49-year-old right-handed man developed progressive cognitive difficulties over a 4-month period. There was impairment in recent memory, calculations and language. He also developed fatigue, weight loss, gait imbalance and urinary incontinence. Past history included transfusion-associated hepatitis C. Neurologic exam showed mild dysarthria, dysnomia, left sided neglect, bilateral Babinski signs, and a prominent grasp reflex. Laboratory testing provided no positive etiologic data. An EEG showed generalized intermittent slowing suggestive of a diffuse encephalopathy and decreased background in the right hemisphere, suggestive of a structural lesion. MRI showed multiple areas of high signal on FLAIR imaging and patchy enhancement. FDG-PET showed multi-focal areas of increased uptake, correlating with the abnormal areas on MRI, on a background of decreased uptake. A 4-vessel cerebral angiogram showed no abnormalities. A brain biopsy showed diffuse infiltrates of large malignant cells that were immunoreactive with antibodies to CD20, diagnostic of diffuse large B cell lymphoma. In summary, the clinical presentation suggested bilateral hemispheric involvement, which was supported by physical examination, EEG, MRI, and PET scans. The differential diagnosis for this presentation is limited to demyelinating disease such as multiple sclerosis, vascular dementia, and infiltrating neoplasm such as glioblastoma multiforme or lymphoma. diagnosis was made by morphologic and immunohistochemical analysis of brain tissue.
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8/31. Thalamic dementia: an example of primary astroglial dystrophy of Seitelberger.

    Pure thalamic dementia is highly uncommon and typically demonstrates widespread loss of neurons throughout the thalamus associated with reactive gliosis. This report describes an autopsy case in which there is widespread gliosis of subcortical white matter, focal hippocampal sclerosis and a unique proliferation of protoplasmic astrocytes in the thalamus, with limited bilateral focal loss of neurons. The alterations of the protoplasmic astrocytes consist of proliferation of perivascular feet surrounding blood vessels and velate sheets which surround individual neurons. It is proposed that the astrocytic alterations, or astrocytic dystrophy, constitute the primary and critical pathologic-change, sufficiently severe to produce dementia in the presence of a relatively intact neuronal population.
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9/31. CT and MR imaging of neuroaxonal leukodystrophy presenting as early-onset frontal dementia.

    CT and MR imaging showed diffuse changes of the frontal white matter and genu of the corpus callosum with minimal atrophy and no contrast enhancement in a 41-year-old woman with progressive dementia. Brain biopsy disclosed axonal spheroids and gliosis in the white matter without macrophage or inflammatory infiltration or vessel abnormalities consistent with neuroaxonal leukodystrophy. This disease can be suspected on CT and MR imaging findings but requires neuropathologic examination to be diagnosed.
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10/31. Angiotropic lymphoma (malignant angioendotheliomatosis) presenting with rapidly progressive dementia.

    An 87-year-old male presented with rapidly progressive dementia, disorder of consciousness and myoclonus, suggesting Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, but with nonspecific EEG and negative CT findings. autopsy revealed a malignant angiotropic lymphoma with accumulation of tumor cells within small vessels of the brain and visceral organs. immunohistochemistry disclosed a large cell lymphoma of B cell type.
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