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Query: UMLS:C0752347 (
Dementia with Lewy bodies
)
1,653
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Dementia with Lewy bodies
(
DLB
) is the second most frequent neuropathologically diagnosed degenerative dementing illness. The clinical characteristics are progressive dementia, parkinsonian syndrome, fluctuations of cognitive functions, alertness, and attention, visual hallucinations (usually detailed and well described), depression, REM sleep behavior disorder, adverse responses to standard neuroleptics doses, falls, syncopes, systematized delusions, and other modalities of hallucinations. Specificity of the clinical diagnostic criteria is high (95%), and sensitivity is considerably lower. Mean age at disease onset ranges between 60 and 68 years. The male gender prevails. Disease duration is 6 to 8 years. The differential diagnoses of
DLB
are dementia of the Alzheimer type, Parkinson's disease, subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy, progressive supranuclear palsy, multiple system atrophy, and rarely
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
. The genetic background of the disease is unclear. Magnetic resonance imaging and single photon emission tomography can contribute to the diagnosis. Controlled pharmacological studies have so far not been published. The disease is treated with L-dopa, atypical neuroleptics, acetylcholine esterase inhibitors, antihypotensive agents, and peripheral anticholinergic and alpha receptor-blocking medications to improve neurogenic bladder dysfunction.
...
PMID:[Dementia with Lewy bodies]. 1113 88
Clinical differentiation of neurodegenerative diseases that produce dementia is imprecise. Neuropathology offers the only way to make a definite diagnosis. The CNS autopsy is also important for clinical quality control and for providing tissue that furthers research into these disabling disorders. This brief article summarizes the major neuropathologic features of largely sporadic disorders that present with late-life dementia. The common causes of dementia discussed are Alzheimer's disease,
Lewy body disease
, and vascular dementia; less common disorders described are dementia lacking distinctive histopathology, Pick's disease, progressive supranuclear palsy, corticobasal degeneration, and
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
.
...
PMID:Neuropathology of Alzheimer's disease and other dementias. 1137 33
Dementia with Lewy bodies
(
DLB
) is the second most frequent neuropathologically diagnosed degenerative dementing illness. The clinical characteristics are progressive dementia, Parkinson syndrome, fluctuations of cognitive functions, vigilance and attention, visual hallucinations (usually detailed and well described), depression, REM-sleep behavior disorder, adverse responses to standard doses of neuroleptics, falls, syncopes, systematized delusions, and non-visual hallucinations. Mean age at disease onset ranges between 60 and 68 years. Male persons are more frequently affected than female. Disease duration is six to seven years. The differential diagnoses of
DLB
are dementia of the Alzheimer-type, Parkinson's disease, subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy, progressive supranuclear palsy, multiple system atrophy, and, in rare cases,
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
. The genetic background of the disease is unclear. Magnetic resonance imaging and single photon emission tomography can contribute to the diagnosis. The disease is treated with L-dopa, atypical neuroleptics, acetylcholine esterase inhibitors, antihypotensive agents, and peripheral anticholinergic and alpha-receptor-blocking medicaments to improve neurogenic bladder dysfunction.
...
PMID:[Dementia with Lewy bodies]. 1192 77
The most widely distributed form of transmissible spongiform encephalopathy, sporadic
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
, typically affects patients in their sixties. Rapidly progressive dementia is usually followed by focal neurological signs and typically myoclonus. The disease duration in sporadic
CJD
is shorter than in variant
CJD
(6 months and 14 months, respectively). The clinical diagnosis in sporadic
CJD
is supported by the detection of periodic sharp and slow wave complexes in the electroencephalogram, hyperintense signals in basal ganglia on magnetic resonance imaging and elevated levels of neuronal proteins in the cerebrospinal fluid (such as 14-3-3). In contrast to the sporadic form, hyperintense signals in the posterior thalamus ("pulvinar sign") are seen in variant
CJD
. Following recent developments in diagnostic premortem techniques, clinical criteria for probable sporadic and probable variant
CJD
were established. Clinicopathological studies on sporadic
CJD
revealed different phenotypes which are characterized by neuropathological lesion profile, clinical syndrome, codon 129 genotype and type of proteinase K-resistant core of the prion protein. Alzheimer's disease and
Lewy body dementia
are the most frequent differential diagnoses in sporadic
CJD
in elderly patients, whereas chronic inflammatory disorders of the central nervous system have to be considered in younger patients.
...
PMID:Clinical diagnosis and differential diagnosis of CJD and vCJD. With special emphasis on laboratory tests. 1206 60
Seven typical cases of dementia with motor neuron disease (D-MND) are reported. Among 1,000 dementia cases, D-MND was more frequent than Pick's disease,
Lewy body disease
or
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
. D-MND accounted for 30.4% of all forms of frontal lobe dementia (FLD) including FLD and Pick's disease. These data support that this combined syndrome may be more frequent than previously reported. As the subcortical neuropathology of D-MND is identical with MND, D-MND is rather the cortical manifestation of MND than a new disease entity.
...
PMID:Dementia accompanying motor neuron disease--7 cases. 1278 34
Doppel (Dpl) is a prion-like protein encoded by the gene PRND, which has been found downstream of the prion gene PRNP in several species. The present study examines by immunohistochemistry Dpl expression in brain samples from 10 patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD), three patients with Pick's disease, four patients with Parkinson's disease, eight patients with diffuse
Lewy body disease
(DLBD), six patients with sporadic
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
(
CJD
) methionine/methionine at the codon 129, two patients with sporadic
CJD
methionine/valine at the codon 129 and numerous kuru plaques in the cerebellum, one patient with fatal familial insomnia (FFI), and 10 age-matched controls. In the adult human brain, Dpl immunoreactivity was restricted to scattered granule cells of the cerebellum and scattered small granules in the cerebral cortex. Dpl immunoreactivity was seen around betaA4 amyloid deposits in neuritic plaques, but not in diffuse plaques, AD and the common form of DLBD. Neurofibrillary tangles, Pick bodies and Lewy bodies were not stained with anti-Dpl antibodies. No modifications in Dpl immunoreactivity were observed in
CJD
excepting those associated with accompanying senile plaques. No Dpl-positive deposits were seen in FFI. Whether Dpl in neuritic plaques may attenuate amyloid-induced oxidative stress and participate in the glial response around amyloid cores is discussed in light of the few available data on Dpl functions.
...
PMID:Selective PrP-like protein, doppel immunoreactivity in dystrophic neurites of senile plaques in Alzheimer's disease. 1530 78
Brain biopsy has an uncertain role in the diagnosis of dementia. Here we report a retrospective analysis of 90 consecutive cerebral biopsies undertaken for the investigation of dementia in adults at a tertiary referral centre between 1989 and 2003. In most cases (90%), biopsy consisted of a right frontal full thickness resection of cortex, white matter and overlying leptomeninges. Fifty-seven per cent of biopsies were diagnostic: the most frequent diagnoses were Alzheimer's disease (18%),
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
(12%) and inflammatory disorders (9%). Other diagnoses in individual patients included Pick's disease, corticobasal degeneration and other tauopathies,
Lewy body dementia
, multiple sclerosis, Whipple's disease, progressive multifocal leucoencephalopathy, cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical ischaemic leucoencephalopathy, vasculopathies and paraneoplastic encephalopathy. The most frequent biopsy finding in the non-diagnostic group and for the series as a whole (37%) was non-specific gliosis variably affecting both cortex and white matter. Complications (11%) included seizures, intracranial and wound infections, and intracranial haemorrhage; there were no deaths or lasting neurological sequelae attributable to the procedure. No trends in diagnostic yield or complication rate over the course of the series were identified. Information obtained at biopsy determined treatment in 11%. A raised cerebrospinal fluid cell count was the only robust predictor of a potentially treatable (inflammatory) process at biopsy. The constellation of behavioural change, raised CSF protein and matched oligoclonal bands in CSF and serum was associated with non-specific gliosis at biopsy. This series underlines the value of cerebral biopsy in the diagnosis of dementia, and suggests that certain clinical and laboratory features may be useful in guiding the decision to proceed to brain biopsy where a treatable disease cannot be excluded by other means.
...
PMID:Brain biopsy in dementia. 1590 48
Dementia is characterized clinically by progressive cognitive decline, often with impairment of memory. The pathology of dementias is either focal as with infarcts in Vascular Dementia or diffuse as typified by Alzheimer's disease. In many cases of Alzheimer's disease there is a mixture of focal infarcts and diffuse changes. Diffuse pathology in dementias comprises mainly intracellular and extracellular protein deposits. Intracellular inclusions are of tau protein (Alzheimer's disease; and some frontotemporal dementias), alpha-synuclein (
Dementia with Lewy bodies
) and huntingtin (Huntington's disease). Soluble and insoluble peptides also accumulate in the extracellular spaces of brain parenchyma in dementias with diffuse pathology, mainly amyloid-beta (Abeta) in parenchymal plaques and in artery walls as cerebral amyloid angiopathy (Alzheimer's disease and
Dementia with Lewy bodies
). Insoluble prion protein (PrP) is deposited in brain parenchyma in
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
and other insoluble amyloid peptides accumulate in brain and vessel walls infamilial dementias. The pattern of extracellular deposits in brain and artery walls suggests that there is a failure of elimination of peptides, such as Abeta along perivascular interstitial fluid drainage pathways ("lymphatics") from the aged brain and in Alzheimer's disease. Such failure may be due to reduced pulsations as arteries stiffen with age and cerebrovascular disease. Immunization against Abeta removes insoluble deposits of Abeta from brain parenchyma and may allow improved clearance of soluble Abeta. Reducing cerebrovascular disease and facilitating elimination of Abeta along perivascular drainage routes may offer long-term preventative measuresfor both Vascular Dementia and for Alzheimer's disease.
...
PMID:Pathophysiology of dementias and implications for therapy. 1676 36
Spongiform change is a cardinal feature in transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, including
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
(
CJD
) and bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE). It is characterized by swelling of the neuronal processes and vacuolization of the neuropil, leading to increased intraneuronal water content. The present study examines, by gel electrophoresis and Western blotting, the expression levels of the water channels aquaporin 1 (AQP1) and aquaporin 4 (AQP4) in the frontal cortex (area 8) homogenates of sporadic
CJD
cases (six men, four women; seven cases with methionine/methionine at codon 129 and PrP type 1; two cases with valine/valine at codon 129 and PrP type 2, and one case methionine/valine at codon 129 and PrP type 1) compared with age-matched controls, and cases with Alzheimer's disease (AD, stage VI of Braak and Braak) and diffuse
Lewy body disease
(DLB). AQP1 and AQP4 protein levels were also studied in the cerebral cortex of BSE-infected bovine-PrP transgenic mice (BoPrP-Tg110 mice) examined at 60, 150, 210 and 270 days post-inoculation (dpi) compared with healthy brain-inoculated control mice. Quantitative densitometry of AQP bands normalized for beta-actin was analyzed using Statgraphics plus 5.0 software from ANOVA and LSD statistical tests. Significant increased expression levels of AQP1 (as revealed with two different antibodies) and AQP4 were seen in
CJD
, but not in advanced AD and DLB cases when compared with controls. Immunohistochemistry revealed that AQP1 and AQP4 were expressed in astrocytes in diseased cases. No modifications in the expression levels of AQP1 and AQP4 were observed in BSE-infected bovine-PrP transgenic mice at 60, 150 and 210 dpi. However, a significant increase in the expression levels of AQP1 and AQP4 was found in mice at 270 dpi, the time corresponding with the appearance of PrP(res) immunoreactivity in Western blots and typical spongiform lesions in the brain. Together, these findings show increased expression of water channels in the brain in human and animal prion diseases. These modifications may have implications in the regulation of water transport in astrocytes and may account for an imbalance in water and ion homeostasis in prion diseases.
...
PMID:Increased expression of water channel aquaporin 1 and aquaporin 4 in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and in bovine spongiform encephalopathy-infected bovine-PrP transgenic mice. 1687 1
Sporadic
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
(sCJD) is a rare transmissible disease caused by accumulation of pathological prion protein in the CNS. sCJD typically affects patients in their sixties. The median disease duration in sCJD (6 months) is shorter than in variant
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
(vCJD) (14 months). The clinical diagnosis in sCJD is supported by the detection of periodic sharp and slow wave complexes (PSWC) in the electroencephalogram, 14-3-3 proteins in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and hyperintense basal ganglia on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). In contrast to sCJD, hyperintensities in the posterior pulvinar (the "pulvinar sign") are seen in vCJD. Different sCJD subtypes characterised by distinct neuropathological lesion profiles, clinical features and codon 129 genotype of the prion protein gene (PRNP) are described, together with the type with a proteinase K-resistant core of the prion protein. The sensitivity of diagnostic tests varies considerably in different sCJD subtypes. Alzheimer 's disease and
Lewy body dementia
are the most frequent differential diagnoses in elderly patients, while chronic inflammatory CNS disorders have to be considered in younger patients.
...
PMID:Clinical findings and diagnostic tests in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. 1690 40
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