Cases reported "Gliosis"

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1/75. An autopsy case of myotonic dystrophy with mental disorders and various neuropathologic features.

    An autopsy case of myotonic dystrophy (MD) is reported. The patient was a 58-year-old male. He presented with muscular weakness and muscular atrophy at the age of 33 and was diagnosed as having MD from myotonic symptoms (i.e. percussion and grip myotonia) at 49 years old. mental disorders including a delusional hallucinatory state, mental slowness, indifference, and lack of spontaneity as well as visual cognitive impairments were noted at the age of 55. He showed Parkinsonism and died of septic shock. T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated diffuse cortical atrophy with a marked frontal atrophy and high-intensity signals in the white matter. Single photon emission computed tomography demonstrated hypoperfusion in the frontal cortex. Neuropathologic observation revealed neuronal loss in the superficial layer of the frontal and parietal cortices and extensive neuronal loss in the occipital cortex, intracytoplasmic inclusion body in the nerve cell of the medial thalamic nuclei, neuronal loss and presence of lewy bodies in the substantia nigra and locus ceruleus corresponding to the pathologic features of Parkinson's disease, as well as abnormalities of myelin in the white matter. The present case suggests that in MD brain, various neuropathologic changes may occur and they contribute to the mental disorders.
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2/75. MELAS with prominent white matter gliosis and atrophy of the cerebellar granular layer: a clinical, genetic, and pathological study.

    This report concerns an autopsy case of mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) with unusual neuropathological findings. The patient was a Japanese woman who was 21 years old at the time of death. Her mother is a patient with genetically confirmed MELAS. Her clinical manifestations included convulsions and lactic acidosis in the latter half of the first decade of life, followed by deafness, dementia, muscle weakness in the lower extremities, slight ataxia in the upper and lower extremities, and diabetes mellitus. Muscle biopsy revealed ragged-red fibers, and genetic study showed a point mutation at nucleotide pair 3243 in mitochondrial DNA. She died of lactic acidosis. In the clinical course, she did not develop stroke-like episodes. The neuropathological examination revealed not only minute to small necrotic foci in the cerebral cortex, amygdala, hippocampus, and cerebellum, but also prominent white matter gliosis in the central nervous system and cerebellar cortical degeneration of granular cell type. Our neuropathological findings, including prominent white matter gliosis of the central nervous system and cerebellar cortical degeneration of granular cell type, may indicate morphologically widespread cellular dysfunction, not restricted to either neuronal or vascular derangement, in the brain pathology of MELAS.
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3/75. Pathological and neuropathological findings in two males with fragile-X syndrome.

    The present paper addresses post mortem pathological and neuropathological findings in two males with fragile-X syndrome, aged 67 and 87 years. Both subjects died from sudden, unexpected cardiovascular causes, and both showed abnormalities of the mitral valve, ventricular hypertrophy and cardiomegaly. Both cases demonstrated macrocephaly characteristic of the classical Martin-Bell phenotype in FRAXA. There was increased brain weight in both cases: macroscopically, both cerebral and cerebellar hemispheres appeared normal, but dilated lateral ventricles were seen; and microscopic examination of the brain in case 2 showed normal hexalaminar architecture and no gross neuronal dropout. The hippocampus showed mild CA4 pyramidal cell loss and associated gliosis. The cerebellum showed focal Purkinje cell loss and corresponding Bergmann gliosis. Whilst there is a need to delineate the microscopic features of fragile-X syndrome from those of the ageing process, there is an urgent need for more systematic neuropathological studies of fragile-X syndrome; the increased brain weight and Purkinje cell loss in autism and fragile-X syndrome reopens the debate on these two conditions. The case for further research into the cardiac anomalies in fragile-X syndrome is also strengthened by the findings. Finally, the present report confirms the role of interstitial cell hyperplasia as the major cause of megalo-testes in this condition.
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keywords = neuronal
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4/75. dna damage and activated caspase-3 expression in neurons and astrocytes: evidence for apoptosis in frontotemporal dementia.

    frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is a neurodegenerative disease which affects mainly the frontal and anterior temporal cortex. It is associated with neuronal loss, gliosis, and microvacuolation of lamina I to III in these brain regions. In previous studies we have described neurons with dna damage in the absence of tangle formation and suggested this may result in tangle-independent mechanisms of neurodegeneration in the AD brain. In the present study, we sought to examine dna fragmentation and activated caspase-3 expression in FTD brain where tangle formation is largely absent. The results demonstrate that numerous nuclei were TdT positive in all FTD brains examined. Activated caspase-3 immunoreactivity was detected in both neurons and astrocytes and was elevated in FTD cases as compared to control cases. A subset of activated caspase-3-positive cells were also TdT positive. In addition, the cell bodies of a subset of astrocytes showed enlarged, irregular shapes, and vacuolation and their processes appeared fragmented. These degenerating astrocytes were positive for activated caspase-3 and colocalized with robust TdT-labeled nuclei. These findings suggest that a subset of astrocytes exhibit degeneration and that dna damage and activated caspase-3 may contribute to neuronal cell death and astrocyte degeneration in the FTD brain. Our results suggest that apoptosis may be a mechanism of neuronal cell death in FTD as well as in AD (228).
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5/75. A case of leukoencephalopathy with vanishing white matter.

    A 6-year old Turkish boy with a recently defined entity: "leukoencephalopathy with vanishing white matter" is described. He was born to consanguinous parents. His psychomotor development was normal till he first presented with fever and generalized tonic-clonic seizures at the age of 2.5, followed by rapid motor and mental deterioration. Decerebrate posture and marked spasticity subsequently developed. The initial MRI examination showed diffuse involvement of white matter, including subcortical U-fibers, with signal intensity parallel to CSF on all sequences. The white matter appeared swollen. The ventricles were slightly enlarged and there was cavum septi pellucidi et vergae. The posterior crus of the internal capsule, external and extreme capsules were affected. Cerebellar hemispheres and vermis showed atrophy. The involvement pattern of brainstem was noteworthy in that pontine tegmentum and cruri cerebri were affected. Follow-up MRI obtained after three years did not show any interval change. brain biopsy showed thinned cortex with relatively preserved cortical layering and neuronal structure. There was rarefaction of the white matter with cystic degeneration. Fibrillary gliosis and increased number of oligodendroglial cells were observed within the cerebral white matter.
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6/75. "Dual pathology" and the significance of surgical outcome in "Dostoewsky's epilepsy".

    A patient with a right occipital arterio-venous malformation (AVM) and seizures heralded by "lights", and experiencing "ecstasy" underwent a right occipital lobectomy after the AVM was embolized. Thereafter, seizures began with motor arrest and lip smacking, but never again with "light and ecstasy". A right temporal lobectomy and electrocorticogram (E.Co.G) were performed under local anesthesia four years after occipital lobectomy. Abundant spiking activity was recorded from the right hippocampus which showed gliosis and neuronal loss in the pathology studies. Electrical stimulation of the lateral and basal temporal cortices failed to elicit the vision of "lights" or the experience of "ecstasy". The patient has had two seizures in the last two years as a result of a lapse in taking his anti-convulsant medication. He now lives alone, seizure-free. The possible abnormally induced functional network organization and structures involved in the production of the "ecstasy" phenomenon are discussed.
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keywords = neuronal
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7/75. Co-localization of alpha-synuclein and phosphorylated tau in neuronal and glial cytoplasmic inclusions in a patient with multiple system atrophy of long duration.

    Neuronal and glial cytoplasmic inclusions (NCIs and GCIs), which contain alpha-synuclein as a major component, are characteristic cytopathological features of multiple system atrophy (MSA). We report MSA of 19 years' duration in a 73-year-old woman. Her initial symptom was parkinsonism, with dementia appearing about 8 years later. Postmortem examination showed marked atrophy of the frontal and temporal white matter and limbic system, in addition to the pathology typical of MSA. In the limbic system, severe neuronal loss and astrocytosis were observed, and the remaining neurons often had lightly eosinophilic, spherical cytoplasmic inclusions. Interestingly, a double-labeling immunofluorescence study revealed that the NCIs in the dentate gyrus and amygdaloid nucleus, and the GCIs in the frontal and temporal white matter often expressed both alpha-synuclein NACP-5 and phosphorylated tau AT8 epitopes. Double-immunolabeling electron microscopy of the NCIs in the dentate gyrus and the GCIs in the temporal white matter clearly revealed labeling of their constituent granule-associated filaments with NACP-5, and some of them were also labeled with AT8. These findings strongly suggested that some alpha-synuclein filaments were decorated with phosphorylated tau without formation of fibrils such as paired helical filaments. immunoblotting of sarkosyl-insoluble tau indicated that the accumulated tau consisted mainly of four-repeat tau isoforms of 383 amino acids and 412 amino acids. We consider that the limbic system can be a major site of neurodegeneration in MSA of long duration. The mechanisms of such abnormal tau accumulation in the NCIs and GCIs are unknown.
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8/75. Serial MRI findings in the Costa Rican variant of neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis.

    Widespread cerebral atrophy and basal ganglia involvement are highly suggestive imaging features of the variants of late infantile type neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis. In the presence of clinical findings indicative of neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis, neuroimaging procedures are highly recommended to differentiate the variants from classic late infantile neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis. The clinical features and follow-up magnetic resonance imaging studies in a patient with the Costa Rican variant of late infantile neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis is presented. These procedures were of the utmost importance to observe the progression of the neurologic ailment and the extent of the cerebral and cerebellar abnormalities.
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9/75. Corpora amylacea replace the hippocampal pyramidal cell layer in a patient with temporal lobe epilepsy.

    A 39-year-old woman, with a 23-year history of medically intractable seizures of the complex partial type, underwent a left anterior temporal lobectomy and hippocampectomy. Histologic examinations revealed a massive occurrence of corpora amylacea, neuronal loss, and gliosis in the pyramidal cell layer of the hippocampus. The distribution of corpora amylacea in this case was quite distinctive and unlike the patterns of "nonspecific" corpora amylacea formation seen in aging or other neurodegenerative conditions. The pathogenetic aspects of the accumulation of these peculiar bodies are discussed in relation to hippocampal sclerosis.
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10/75. Neuropathological findings in a patient with epilepsy and the Parry-Romberg syndrome.

    PURPOSE: The Parry-Romberg syndrome is an unusual disorder frequently associated with epilepsy. The origin of this disease, and the cause of epilepsy, are unknown. This study is the first reported case of the Parry-Romberg syndrome, with intractable temporal lobe epilepsy, in which detailed microanatomic analyses have been performed on resected brain tissue obtained after surgical intervention. methods: Standard histopathologic methods and correlative light and electron microscopy, combined with immunocytochemical techniques, were used to study in detail the synaptic microorganization of the resected hippocampal formation. RESULTS: After surgery, the patient was seizure free (follow-up period of 4 years and 7 months). The resected temporal lobe showed a variety of dramatic microanatomic alterations (small groups of ectopic cells, neuronal loss, gliosis, and activated microglial cells) in mesial structures, including the entorhinal cortex, subiculum, and dentate gyrus. At the electron-microscopic level, we found that in the dentate gyrus, the number of synapses in the cell-sparse region adjacent to the ectopic mass of neurons was almost twice that found in the molecular and polymorph cell layers, indicating the intrusion of neuritic processes and synapse formation. In addition, the symmetrical axosomatic synapses characteristically found on granule cells, which are likely derived from gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)ergic inhibitory basket cells, were not observed. CONCLUSION: The complete seizure relief after surgery suggests that the pacemaker region(s) of seizure activity were within the resected tissue. However, we do not know which of the multiple neuropathologic findings reported here were the primary cause of seizure activity. Nevertheless, the changes found in the dentate gyrus circuitry appear to be among the most important alterations that would lead to epilepsy.
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