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CNS Degenerative Diseases
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Alzheimer's Disease
-
Senile dementia of the Alzheimer's type (SDAT), or Alzheimer's
disease (AD) is becoming more common in developed nations as the
population includes more and more older persons. There is no known cause
for the disease. It is not known why some people present as early as 30
or 40 years of age with dementia while others do not present until their
late 70's or 80's. Familial cases with a defined inheritance pattern
account for only 5 to 10% of Alzheimer's disease. Familial cases tend to
have an earlier age at onset. Genetic defects in familial cases have
been identified on chromosomes 21, 19, 14, 12 and 1.
The so-called "early onset" cases of AD in persons in their 30's,
40's, and 50's may have a genetic basis. Less than 1% of early onset AD
cases are linked to a genetic defect on chromosome 21 (which may explain
the appearance of Alzheimer's disease in persons with Down syndrome
surviving to middle age) which affects amyloid precursor protein (APP),
resulting in fibrillar aggregates of beta-amyloid that is toxic to
neurons. About half of early onset AD cases are linked to mutations in
the presenilin 1 gene on chromosome 14. A presenilin 2 gene has been
discovered on chromosome 1, but this defect accounts for less than 1% of
cases.
The more typical "late onset" cases of AD occurring after age 60 may
have underlying genetic defects. A genetic locus on chromosome 19
encodes for a cholesterol transporter called apolipoprotein E (apoE).
The E4 variant of apoE, which increases deposition of fibrillar
beta-amyloid, can be found in 40% of AD cases. However, the presence of
apoE4 is neither necessary nor sufficient for development of AD, so
testing for it is not warranted. A genetic locus on chromosome 12 that
encodes for alpha-2-macroglobulin may be found in 30% of AD cases.
Mutations in the tau gene which codes for tau, a protein that is
associated with microtubules, can be found in some AD cases. The
abnormal tau may account for helical filaments found in neurofibrillary
tangles.
Regardless of the cause, the diagnosis of AD is made clinically by
the finding of progressive memory loss with increasing inability to
participate in activities of daily living. Late in the course of the
disease, affected persons are not able to recognize family members and
may not know who they are. The definitive diagnosis is made
pathologically by examination of the brain at autopsy. Grossly, there is
cerebral atrophy, mainly in frontal, temporal, and parietal regions. As
a consequence, there is ex vacuo ventricular dilation.
The confirmation of a diagnosis of AD is made at autopsy. The
pathognomonic microscopic feature of AD is an increased number of
neuritic plaques in the cerebral cortex. These neuritic plaques are
composed of tortuous neuritic processes surrounding a central amyloid
core. Reactive astrocytes and microglia may appear at the periphery of
these plaques. Though plaques may easily be found in the hippocampus,
their presence in increased numbers in neocortex is necessary for a
diagnosis of AD. The amyloid core consists primarily of a small peptide
known as Aß which is derived from the larger amyloid precursor protein
(APP). Plaques that have the amyloid proteins but lack the neuritic
processes are known as diffuse plaques, which do not count toward the
diagnosis of AD. Since the number of plaques increases with age, the
number needed for diagnosis of AD is age-dependent. Other histologic
features of AD include neurofibrillary tangles, amyloid angiopathy, and
granolovacuolar degeneration.
Biochemical evidence points to a loss of the choline
acetyltransferase and acetylcholine in the cerebral cortex of patients
with Alzheimer's disease. However, the significance of this finding is
not clear. There is loss of higher brain functions with AD leading to
profound dementia. The course is usually over 5 to 7 years. The
immediate cause of death for most persons with Alzheimer's disease is
pneumonia, typically an aspiration pneumonia.
- Alzheimer's
disease, gross.
- Alzheimer's
disease, gross.
- Alzheimer's
disease, gross.
- Alzheimer's
disease, Bielschowsky silver stain, microscopic.
- Alzheimer's
disease, thioflavin stain, microscopic.
- Alzheimer's
disease, senile plaque, with Congo red stain, microscopic.
- Alzheimer's
disease, neurofibrillary tangle, H and E stain, microscopic.
- Alzheimer's
disease, neurofibrillary tangle, with Bielschowsky silver stain,
microscopic.
Lewy Body Diseases
-
Dementia with Lewy bodies is a clinicopathological syndrome that may
account for up to 20% of all cases of dementia in older patients,
typically in their seventh and eighth decades. Diseases with Lewy bodies
should also be considered in the differential diagnosis of a wide range
of clinical presentations including episodic disturbances of
consciousness, syncope, sleep disorders, and unexplained delirium.
There are three major syndromes associated with the appearance of
Lewy bodies. These are: the movement disorder known as Parkinson
disease, autonomic nervous system failure, and dementia. Parkinsonism,
the most common syndrome with Lewy bodies, is a disease developing in
middle age. In older persons, a mixture of cognitive, autonomic, and
motor dysfunction is more common. Some older persons with dementia who
are thought to have Alzheimer disease may actually have diffuse Lewy
body disease, and some of those persons may have a movement disorder
resembling Parkinson disease. Conversely, some patients initially
presenting with Parkinson disease may develop manifestations of Lewy
body dementia.
The clinical presentation of Lewy body disease varies according to
the site of Lewy body formation and associated neuronal loss. In
Parkinson disease, the Lewy bodies are found in the substantia nigra of
the midbrain, coupled with the loss of pigmented neurons. In persons
with the dementia of diffuse Lewy body disease, there are Lewy bodies in
the neocortex. Some persons have the Lewy bodies in both locations. The
basal ganglia and diencephalon may also be involved in some cases.
Lewy bodies are spherical, intraneuronal, cytoplasmic, eosinophilic
inclusions comprising abnormally truncated and phosphorylated
intermediate neurofilament proteins, alpha-synuclein, ubiquitin, and
associated enzymes. Alpha-synuclein can also be found in another
neurodegenerative disease known as multiple system atrophy.
- Diffuse
Lewy body disease, microscopic.
Multi-infarct Dementia
-
Multi-infarct dementia (MID) can cause a dementia similar to
Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, no pathologic findings are present
characteristic of AD. Instead, there are multiple ischemic lesions in
the cerebral cortex that cumulatively result in loss of enough neurons
to produce dementia. Most patients with MID have an abrupt onset of
cognitive symptoms along with an incremental loss of mental function.
Focal neurologic deficits can be present, depending upon the size and
location of the infarcts. In some cases, though, there is gradual loss
of mental function. Pathologically, marked cerebral arterial
atherosclerosis and/or thromboembolic disease can account for the
appearance of many infarcts, typically small and scattered.
- Multi-infarct
dementia, gross.
Pick's Disease
-
This is an uncommon cause for dementia, but it appear similar to
Alzheimer's disease. About 90% of cases are sporadic and the rest
familial. The cerebral atrophy with Pick's disease is lobar and
typically involves the frontal and temporal lobes. This atrophy is so
striking that it is "knife-like" in appearance. This atrophy may be
asymmetrical. Microscopically, there is marked loss of cortical neurons
with gliosis. Pick bodies, cytoplasmic inclusions that are highlighted
by silver stain, are seen in the cortex.
Mutations in the tau gene which codes for tau, a protein that
is associated with microtubules, can be found in Pick's disease. The
abnormal tau may be present in the microscopically apparent Pick bodies,
which have partially degraded (called ubiquitinated, since they are
positive with immunohistochemical staining for ubiquitin) tau
fibrils.
- Pick's
disease, gross.
- Pick's
disease, gross.
Huntington's Disease
-
This is autosomal dominant in inheritance and the patient's usually
present between the ages of 20 and 50 years, with a course that averages
15 years to death. Patients may either present with choreiform
movements, character change, or psychotic behavior. The genetic defect
is localized to chromosome 4. The abnormal gene, called HD, on
chromosome 4 encodes for a protein, called huntingtin, that contains
increased trinucleotide CAG repeat sequences. The greater the number of
repeats, the earlier the onset of the disease. Spontanenous new
mutations are uncommon.
Pathologically there is severe loss of small neurons in the caudate
and putamen with subsequent astrocytosis. With the loss of cells, the
head of the caudate becomes shrunken and there is "ex vacuo" dilatation
of the anterior horns of the lateral ventricles. There is a loss of
gamma aminobutyric acid (GABA), acetylcholine and substance
P.
- Huntington's
disease, gross.
- Huntington's
disease, microscopic.
Parkinson's Disease
-
Most cases are sporadic. This syndrome covers several diseases of
different etiologies which affect primarily the pigmented neuronal
groups including the substantia nigra, locus ceruleus, dorsal motor
nucleus of cranial nerve X and the substantia innominata. Patients
usually present with movement problems such as a festinating gait,
cogwheel rigidity of the limbs, poverty of voluntary movement, and a
pill rolling type of tremor at rest. In time the patient's facies will
become mask-like. Usually mental deterioration does not occur but some
patients may become demented as the disease progresses. Idiopathic
Parkinson's disease commonly begins in late middle age and the course is
slowly progressive. The pigmented neurons are slowly lost as the disease
progresses and melanin pigment can be seen within the background
neuropil or within macrophages. Astrocytosis occurs secondary to
neuronal loss.
Some patients with Parkinsonian symptoms also have dementia, and in
these patients there are Lewy bodies in the cerebral cortex, as well as
the substantia nigra. This can be termed diffuse Lewy body disease
(DLBD), or Lewy body dementia, and it is in the differential diagnosis
for Alzheimer's disease. Pathologically, Lewy bodies in association with
Parkinson's disease are found within the cytoplasm of pigmented neurons.
For a diagnosis of DLBD, the Lewy bodies must be found in the neocortex.
These are homogeneous pink bodies on H&E stains with a surrounding
halo. Immunohistochemical staining with antibody to alpha-synuclein is
positive in these Lewy bodies.
The rare familial forms of Parkinson's disease include an autosomal
dominant form with mutations in the alpha-synuclein gene and an
autosomal recessive form with mutations in the ubiquitin-protein ligase
(parkin) gene.
- Parkinson's
disease, gross.
- Parkinson's
disease, microscopic.
- Lewy
bodies, H and E stain at the left, immunoperoxidase staining with
antibody to ubiquitin at the right, microscopic.
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
-
ALS (also known as Lou Gehrig's disease after the famous Yankee first
baseman who had this disease) results from loss of motor neurons which
is most striking in the anterior horn cells of spinal cord but may
involve cranial motor nuclei and Betz cells. The loss of anterior horn
cells leads to muscle atrophy. Astrocytosis is seen in response to the
loss of motor neurons. Because of the loss of upper motor neurons, there
is lateral column degeneration with gliosis, the so-called "sclerosis"
of the lateral columns of spinal cord. Males are affected more commonly
than females. The patients present in middle age with weakness of the
extremities and may go on to develop bulbar signs and symptoms. The
course is usually 2 to 6 years after diagnosis, but patients presenting
with bulbar signs and symptoms have a shorter life span because of
swallowing difficulties and aspiration. The etiology is unknown. Most
cases occur sporadically, but 1 to 10% of cases may have an autosomal
dominant inheritance pattern.
- Amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis, gross.
- Amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis. microscopic.
- Amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis, microscopic, Luxol fast blue stain.
- Amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis, muscle biopsy, microscopic, trichrome stain.
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease
-
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) is rare, affecting less than one
person in a million per year. Though it has been reported to occur at a
variety of ages, the median age of onset is in the seventh decade, with
80% of cases occurring between the ages of 50 and 70, but cases can
occur in young adults. The course of the illness can be from a few weeks
to eight years. However, the average length of survival from onset of
the disease is six months. CJD is a uniformly fatal rapidly progressive
dementia.
The clinical features of CJD include dementia, often with psychiatric
or behavioral disturbances, in 100% of cases. About 80% of cases are
marked by the appearance of myoclonus. By electroencephalography (EEG),
there are periodic biphasic or triphasic synchronous sharp-wave
complexes that are superimposed upon a slow background rhythm. Both
myoclonus and characteristic EEG changes may subside late in the course
of disease. Other neurologic findings may include cerebellar signs,
pyramidal tract signs, extrapyramidal signs, corticla visual defects,
abnormal extraocular movements, lower motor neuron signs, vestibular
dysfunction, seizures, sensory deficits, and autonomic
abnormalities.
Routine laboratory findings are not helpful. There is no dysfunction
of major organ systems besides the central nervous system. Cerebrospinal
fluid (CSF) will not show an increase in cells or immunoglobulins, and
occasionally a mildly elevated protein. An abnormal protein called
14-3-3 can be found in the CSF by immunoassay, but this protein may be
found in association with viral encephalitis and stroke. A Western blot
assay or immunoperoxidase staining of cells can be performed to try and
identify PrPres in biopsied lymphoid tissue (tonsil), but
this may not always be helpful.
There are no characteristic gross pathologic features of CJD. In
fact, because of the typical short course of the disease, no gross
changes are seen at all. Persons living beyond 6 months to a year may
have some degree of generalized cerebral atrophy.
The spongiform encephalopathy of CJD is seen microscopically to
exhibit many round to oval vacuoles varying in size from one to 50
microns in size in the neuropil of cortical gray matter. These vacuoles
may be single or multiloculated. The vacuoles may coalesce to
microcysts. Most cases of CJD also demonstrate neuronal loss and
gliosis. In general, the longer the course of the disease, the more
pronounced the microscopic changes will be. The PrPres can be
identified in tissues with immunoperoxidase staining.
The agent associated with CJD appears to be a prion protein (PrP), a
neuronal cell surface sialoglycoprotein that is encoded by a gene on
chromosome 20. It is thought that the normal cellular prion protein,
designated PrPc, is converted via a conformational change to
an abnormal form of PrP, designated PrPSc, that is
protease-resistant and can accumulate in the central nervous system of
affected persons. This accumulation of abnormal protein, thus designated
PrPres accounts for the degenerative changes in the cerebral
cortex by inducing conformational change in the normal PrP, designated
PrPC. The accumulation of PrPres leads to loss of
neuronal cell function, vacuolization, and death.
These abnormal PrP's can be transmitted from a person with spongiform
encephalopathy to another person, at least by the evidence from
transmission via pituitary extracts, corneal transplants, dural grafts,
and contaminated electrodes from neurosurgical procedures. Transmission
via close personal contact, in the workplace, or via transfusion of
blood products does not appear to occur. How transmission occurs
naturally is not clear, though an acquired mutation of the gene encoding
for PrP may account for the appearance of sporadic cases. The abnormal
PrP can catalyze the conversion of normal to abnormal PrP.
Further evidence for genetic mutation comes from the appearance of
familial cases of CJD. About 15% of CJD cases are familial, with
clusters reported in Chile, Slovakia, and Italy. Transmission in
familial cases appears to be autosomal dominant, and the onset is
earlier in life and the course more prolonged than for sporadic cases.
In familial cases of CJD, the typical EEG changes are often lacking, and
the 14-3-3 protein is absent from CSF half the time.
The presence of particular polymorphisms at codon 129 of PrP may have
an influence on susceptibility to disease. The amino acids methionine
(M) or valine (V) may be present. In 37% of healthy persons, both
inherited PrP genes code for methionine, and half have M/V. 73% of
persons with sporadic CJD have the M/M phenotype, and 100% of persons
with variant CJD have this phenotype. However, subgroups of sporadic CJD
can be found with all polymorphisms, but differing characteristics, as
shown the the table below:
Group
| Codon 129
| Major Clinical Findings
|
1
| M/M
| Dementia with occasional visual disturbances and ataxia
|
2
| M/M
| Dementia
|
3
| M/V
| Ataxia with dementia; Kuru-type plaques histologically
|
4
| V/V
| Ataxia |
CJD is one form of spongiform encephalopathy, other forms of which
can affect mammalian species besides humans. The spongiform
encephalopathy known as scrapie that is seen in sheep is poorly
transmissible to other species. However, bovine spongiform
encephalopathy (BSE), also called "mad cow disease", can be transmitted
more readily to animals other than cattle. The relationship of human
spongiform encephalopathy with animal forms of this disease is not
entirely clear. An outbreak of BSE among cattle in England in the 1980's
was followed by the appearance of rare cases of a CJD-like illness in
the 1990's that were characterized by younger age of onset, lack of
characteristic EEG findings, longer course of disease, and more
extensive spongiform change with plaques in the brains of affected
persons. These cases are known as variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
(vCJD). This suggests the possibility of a relationship, but the rarity
of vCJD cases, similar to the rarity of standard CJD cases, precludes
compelling epidemiologic evidence. Cases of vCJD continue to appear in
regions where BSE was prevalent.
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease, high power microscopic.
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease, high power microscopic.
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease, medium power microscopic.
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease, high power microscopic.
- Variant
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD), high power microscopic.
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease, MRI scan.
Other Degenerative Diseases
-
Frontal lobe degeneration (FLD), also called frontotemporal
dementia or non-specific frontal lobe dementia, has a slow, insidious
onset marked in the early stages by personality changes, then
progressive loss of speech, disinhibition, apathy, personal neglect, and
finally mutism. The mean age of onset is in the 6th decade. About 90% of
cases are sporadic and the rest familial. The gross pathologic findings
are similar to Pick's disease, with marked atrophy in a frontal lobe and
sometimes temporal lobe distribution. Microscopically, there is a spongy
vacuolization of layer 2 of the frontal and temporal cortex, along with
loss of neurons and gliosis, and no increase in neuritic plaques. Pick
bodies may appear in 15% of cases. Aggregates of tau protein are not
common in sporadic cases. Both straight filaments and neurofibrillary
tangles with paired helical filaments of mutant tau protein have been
found in familial cases.
Corticobasal degeneration (CBD) is classified as an akinetic
rigid movement disorder classically consisting of progessive asymmetric
rigidity and apraxia with late development of cognitive decline.
However, a wider clinical spectrum, including dementia as an early
finding, is possible. Postmortem gross features include asymmetrical
cortical atrophy of the posterior frontal, parietal, and the
peri-Rolandic cortex contralateral to the limbs most severly affected in
life. Histologic findings include focal/asymmetric neocortical atrophy,
which predominantly involves the frontoparietal region in most cases,
and ballooned achromatic neurons. Basal ganglia and nigral degeneration
are often but not always present. The etiology is unknown but molecular
studies indicate glial and neuronal accumulation of the tau protein in
affected areas. There is substantial pathological and clinical overlap
with other neurodegenerative disorders such as Creutzfeld-Jakob disease,
progessive supranuclear palsy, Alzheimer's disease, and Pick's disease.
This can make unequivocal diagnosis difficult.
Multiple system atrophy (MSA) has features that overlap
striatonigral degeneration, olivopontocerebellar atrophy, and Shy-Drager
syndrome. Most patients with MSA exhibit symptoms similar to Parkinson's
disease. MSA is characterized microscopically by the appearance of glial
cytoplasmic inclusions.
Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) is classically marked by
a supranuclear gaze palsy along with rigidity, but patients with this
disorder may present with dementia that appears similar to Alzheimer's
disease. The diagnosis is made by the microscopic findings of globose
neurofibrillary tangles and variable neuron loss with gliosis of the
globus pallidus, subthalamic nucleus, periaqueductal grey matter, and
substantia nigra. Mutant tau protein has been found in association with
PSP.
- Progressive
supranuclear palsy, globose tangle, Bielschowsky stain, microscopic.
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