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Query: UNIPROT:P01034 (
cystatin C
)
3,397
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hereditary
cystatin C
amyloid angiopathy (HCCAA) is a dominantly inherited disease characterized by amyloidosis,
dementia
and fatal cerebral hemorrhage of young adults. A method for rapid and simple diagnosis of HCCAA is described. It is based upon oligonucleotide-directed enzymatic amplification of a 275-bp genomic DNA segment containing exon 2 of the
cystatin C
gene from a blood sample, followed by digestion of the amplification product with AluI. Loss of an AluI recognition site in the amplified DNA segment from HCCAA patients results in a deviating band-pattern at agarose gel electrophoresis, compared with that obtained from normal subjects or unaffected HCCAA family members. In a population of 9 patients with manifest HCCAA, 14 patients with other causes of brain hemorrhage and 16 healthy individuals, the diagnostic procedure displayed a sensitivity and specificity for HCCAA of 100%. Amplified DNA segments from 4 HCCAA patients of four different families were analyzed by nucleotide sequencing; the HCCAA-causing mutation in all families was found to be a single T----A substitution in the codon for amino acid residue 68 of
cystatin C
.
...
PMID:Hereditary cystatin C amyloid angiopathy: identification of the disease-causing mutation and specific diagnosis by polymerase chain reaction based analysis. 135 69
Hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis--Dutch type (HCHWA-D) is characterized by recurrent cerebral hemorrhages and
dementia
at a relatively young age. The symptoms are caused by extensive deposition of amyloid in cerebral arterioles and leptomeningeal arteries. A point-mutation in the beta-protein precursor gene on chromosome 21 is the underlying cause of the disease. This paper summarizes the clinical, radiologic, pathologic, and genetic features of this disease, with special attention to the relation between
HCHWA
-D and Alzheimer's disease, which is also characterized by beta-protein deposition.
...
PMID:Hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis--Dutch type: a congophilic angiopathy. An overview. 177 34
CAA
is the infiltration of leptomeningeal and penetrating cortical vessels with amyloid, sparing the subcortical regions and the systemic vasculature. It occurs with increasing frequency after the sixth decade. The major clinical manifestation of
CAA
is lobar intracerebral hemorrhage, which can be sporadic or hereditary.
CAA
has also been associated with normal aging, Alzheimer's disease, cerebral infarction, and periventricular demyelination. Biochemical studies have shown that the amyloid deposits in the brains of patients with normal aging, sporadic
CAA
-associated hemorrhage, hereditary cerebral hemorrhage, and Alzheimer's disease are identical. The exact mechanism by which
CAA
produces lobar hemorrhages and the role of
CAA
in the development of
dementia
are unclear. Biopsy of the involved cerebral cortex and leptomeninges is the only definitive way to diagnose
CAA
. Acute management of
CAA
-associated lobar hemorrhage consists of aggressive control of associated hypertension and supportive care. Surgical removal of the hemorrhage has not been shown to improve survival. Antiplatelet and anticoagulant therapy should be avoided in elderly patients with known
CAA
.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and treatment of cerebral amyloid angiopathy. 186 14
The clinical history and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings are presented of 7 patients with hereditary cerebral haemorrhage with amyloidosis--Dutch type (HCHWA-D). The diagnosis was based on clinical and genealogical data, was confirmed in 3 patients at autopsy and in 2 others by biopsy. Focal neurological signs, and at least some degree of global cognitive deterioration, were observed in all patients, with unequivocal
dementia
in 4. MRI showed haemorrhages and areas of gliosis and, to a variable extent, hyperintensity of the white matter in T2-weighted images. Neuropathological examination revealed a large recent haemorrhage together with residual lesions from previous haemorrhages or infarcts in all patients examined. The white matter lesions, present on MRI, turned out to be areas of 'incomplete infarction' with demyelination. It is concluded that (hereditary) amyloid angiopathy can lead to strokes, but also to subcortical ischaemic encephalopathy. Amyloid angiopathy should therefore be considered in the differential diagnosis of white matter lesions, found on CT or MRI, especially when patients present with a cerebral haemorrhage. The relationship between
HCHWA
-D and Alzheimer's disease, another disease with cerebral amyloid deposition and diffuse white matter involvement, is discussed.
...
PMID:Hereditary cerebral haemorrhage with amyloidosis--Dutch type. Magnetic resonance imaging findings in 7 cases. 224 95
Nineteen cases of hereditary
cystatin C
amyloidosis with cerebral haemorrhage are described. The first haemorrhage occurred between the ages of 20 and 41 years and the period of survival varied from 10 days to 23 years after the first insult. Progressive dementia was a striking clinical symptom in 17 of the patients and in two cases
dementia
was the first sign. At the last examination severe
dementia
and pronounced pathological EEG were established in the majority of the patients. Infiltration of amyloid substance positive for anti-
cystatin C
was found in the proximity of the blood vessels and in their walls. Lesions in the cerebral microvascular system together with haemorrhages and infarcts caused thereby were considered to be an adequate explanation of the
dementia
in these patients. In view of the discovery of amyloid discharges in tissues outside the CNS it is adjudged more correct to use the name Hereditary Cystatin C Amyloidosis (HCCA).
...
PMID:[Hereditary cerebral hemorrhage. Dementia with cystatin C amyloidosis]. 232 Apr 3
Nineteen cases with verified Hereditary Cystatin C Amyloid Angiopathy are presented. All of the cases had one or more cerebrovascular insults starting at the age of 20-41 years and survived from 10 days to 23 years after the first insult. Progressive dementia was a prominent clinical feature in seventeen cases of whom two presented with
dementia
. At the last examination the majority had severe
dementia
and severely abnormal EEG. Anti-
cystatin C
positive amyloid vascular and perivascular infiltrates were found. The resulting damage to the microvasculature of the brain and secondary hemorrhages and infarctions were considered to be an adequate explanation for the
dementia
in these cases. Skin biopsies can now probably be used to demonstrate
cystatin C
positive amyloid deposits conclusively in the tissues of these patients.
...
PMID:Dementia in hereditary cystatin C amyloidosis. 260 13
Brain biopsies from two patients with non-hereditary cerebral hemorrhages and eighty autopsied cases with the clinical diagnosis of
dementia
are presented. The biopsied cases, both males aged 64 and 59, had a sudden onset of cerebral hemorrhage, mild progressive
dementia
and
cystatin C
cerebral amyloid angiopathy. Of the autopsied cases 59 had senile plaques and cerebral amyloid angiopathy was also found in 36 of them. Both senile plaques and the blood vessel amyloid stained positively with beta-protein antibodies, and five of them also showed a positive reaction to
cystatin C
antibodies. These
cystatin C
positive cases were three males aged 76, 80 and 83, and one female 93 years old and the fifth case was a female aged 47 with Down's syndrome.
...
PMID:Dementia with non-hereditary cystatin C angiopathy. 269 Jan 11
Amyloid protein in Icelandic patients with hereditary cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is a variant of
cystatin C
. Immunoreactivities of the
cystatin C
and other amyloid proteins were investigated in CAA and other senile amyloid deposits in the Japanese sporadic aged cases including patients with
dementia
of Alzheimer type, and compared with those in Icelandic hereditary CAA. Compared with positive reaction of
cystatin C
in Icelandic hereditary CAA, no immunoreactivity of
cystatin C
was found in senile amyloid deposits of the Japanese aged including CAA. Immunoreactivity of the amyloid beta protein was negative in Icelandic hereditary CAA, for which CAA and senile plaque amyloid in the Japanese senile brains were positive. Our data suggest that the
cystatin C
amyloid would be present only in hereditary CAA, but not in the CAA and other senile amyloid deposits of the sporadic aged cases.
...
PMID:Absence of the cystatin C amyloid in the cerebral amyloid angiopathy, senile plaque, and extra-CNS amyloid deposits of aged Japanese. 278 31
Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) refers to a group of hereditary (hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis,
HCHWA
and sporadic (SCAA) disorders characterized by amyloid fibril deposition restricted to the leptomeningeal and cortical vasculature leading to recurrent hemorrhagic and/or ischemic accidents. On clinical and biochemical grounds, two forms of
HCHWA
can be distinguished. The amyloid subunit of the
HCHWA
of Icelandic origin is related to Cystatin C, while amyloid from patients of Dutch origin (
HCHWA
-D) is related to the beta-protein (or A4), the main component of vascular and plaque core amyloid in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and Down's syndrome (DS) [corrected]. SCAA is an increasingly recognized cause of stroke in normotensive individual amounting to 5-10% of all cerebrovascular accidents. We now report the isolation and partial amino acid sequence of the amyloid subunit from a case of SCAA and a new case of
HCHWA
-D. The recognition that a heterogeneous group of diseases are linked by similar pathological and chemical features suggests that diversity of etiological factors may promote a common pathogenetic mechanism leading to amyloid-beta (A beta) deposition, and open new ways of research in AD and CAA as they are related to
dementia
and stroke.
...
PMID:Beta-protein deposition: a pathogenetic link between Alzheimer's disease and cerebral amyloid angiopathies. 305 68
Amyloid deposition is a prominent feature of a number of brain disorders, in which amyloid fibrils are found within blood vessel walls, the neuropil (neuritic plaques), neurons (neurofibrillary tangles). These include Alzheimer's disease (AD), AD changes associated with Down's syndrome, neurologically asymptomatic amyloidosis, Parkinson
dementia
of Guam, hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis of Icelandic origin (HCHWA-I), hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis of Dutch origin (HCHWA-D), and sporadic cerebral amyloid angiopathy (SCAA). Recently it was shown that the amyloid deposits in AD, Parkinson
dementia
of Guam, and
HCHWA
-D are formed by a similar 4-kd polypeptide called beta-protein. Because the nature of the amyloid deposits in other types of cerebral amyloidosis is not known, we have conducted immunocytochemical studies on brains from autopsy cases of AD,
HCHWA
-D, SCAA and neurologically asymptomatic elderly individuals. Brains from two subjects without neurologic involvement were used as controls. Sections from these specimens were incubated with rabbit polyclonal antibodies against 1) a synthetic peptide of 28 residues (anti-SP28), homologous to the NH2-terminal sequence of the beta-protein, 2) the main amyloid component of the HCHWA-I, a variant of
cystatin C
, and 3) purified fraction of neurofibrillary tangles. In all cases, anti-SP28 antibody specifically stained amyloid deposits in leptomeningeal and cortical vessels and neuritic plaques. These findings demonstrate that the amyloid deposits of SCAA and aged brains are composed of a protein antigenically similar to AD, HCHWA-D, and Parkinson
dementia
of Guam beta-protein, suggesting that all of these clinically and etiologically different morbid conditions are pathogenetically related. On this basis, they can be tentatively grouped as beta-protein deposition diseases. In addition, we found that HCHWA-D and SCAA vessels were mainly affected, while in AD parenchymal involvement predominates. These differences in the localization and extent of beta-protein deposits may account from the predominance of vascular complications in HCHWA-D and SCAA and of
dementia
in AD.
...
PMID:Brain amyloid in normal aging and cerebral amyloid angiopathy is antigenically related to Alzheimer's disease beta-protein. 332 21
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