Cases reported "Gliosis"

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1/2. Frontoparietal cortical atrophy with gliosis in the gray matter of cerebral cortex: case report.

    The case of a patient who suffered from progressive amnesia, depressive humor, language and visuospatial disturbances, and hallucination episodies with interference at the daily living activities is reported. She had moderate neuropsychological diffuse deficits at the first examination, especially at the executive and visuo-constructive functions. Her cerebrospinal fluid test presented high total protein. Magnetic resonance image showed slight white matter increase in periventricular, semi-oval center bilateral and left external capsule regions, besides light frontal and parietal lobe atrophy, bilaterally. brain single photon emission computerized tomography revealed both a bilateral moderate frontal and a severe parietal lobe hypoperfusion, especially on the left side. Macroscopic examination showed cortical atrophy, severe on the frontal, moderate on the parietal and mild on the posterior third temporal lobes, bilaterally. There was a slight atrophy on the neostriatum in the basal ganglia. The histopathological findings of the autopsy showed severe neuronal loss with intensive gemioscytic gliosis and variable degrees of status spongiosus in cortical layer. hematoxylin-eosin and Bielschowsky staining did not show neuronal swelling (balooned cell), argyrophilic inclusion (Pick's bodies), neurofibrillary tangles nor senile plaques. Immunohistochemical staining for anti-ubiquitin, anti-tau, anti-beta-amyloide, and anti-prion protein were tested negative.
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ranking = 1
keywords = neostriatum
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2/2. Mosaic pattern of gliosis in the neostriatum of a North American man with craniocervical dystonia and parkinsonism.

    We present the case of a 51-year-old patient with a 31-year history of psychiatric symptoms, craniocervical dystonia, bulbar dysfunction, and parkinsonism. His dystonic movements included blepharospasm, jaw opening and lingual dystonia, and spasmodic retrocollis. Psychiatric symptoms included psychosis and depression, with onset years before the movement disorder. After his death by aspiration, examination of his brain revealed abnormalities limited to the neostriatum. Staining of brain sections, including Holzer, glial fibrillary acidic protein, and immunohistochemical stain for calbindin D28k, revealed the presence of a mosaic pattern of gliosis with neuronal loss (sparing large neurons) within this region. The islands of tissue between stands of gliosis had a normal appearance. This patient represents only the fourth case (and first North American born) with a mosaic pattern of gliosis in the neostriatum. The clinical and pathologic features were similar in all four cases except that our patient was the first with prominent psychiatric symptoms and a more stable, less progressive course. mosaicism has been described in the X-linked Filipino disorder Lubag. Occurrence in non-Filipino patients, such as ours, suggest that either Lubag can develop in non-Filipino families or that mosaicism is a nonspecific pathologic finding in some patients with idiopathic dystonia. Finally, our case reports the notion that craniocervical dystonia may result from neostriatal dysfunction.
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ranking = 6
keywords = neostriatum
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