Degenerative Diseases of Brain. Degenerative Diseases Spontaneous, progressive degeneration of...

37
Degenerative Diseases of Brain

Transcript of Degenerative Diseases of Brain. Degenerative Diseases Spontaneous, progressive degeneration of...

Degenerative Diseases of Brain

Degenerative Diseases

• Spontaneous, progressive degeneration of neurons

• Sporadic, Familial

• Overlapping features

Degenerative Diseases

• Spontaneous, progressive degeneration of neurons

• Sporadic, Familial

• Overlapping features– Alzheimer disease– Parkinsonism– Huntington Disease

Alzheimer Disease

• Dementia, memory impairment, recent memory loss

• Most common cause of dementia in elderly

• >50 years (Down syndrome at 40y)

• 10% familial

Alzheimer Disease

• Clinical– Progressive memory and cognitive loss– Over 5-15 years– Starts with recent memory loss, missing words– Progress to language difficulties and loss of

higher cortical function– Some: have parkinsonism like features– Death is due to pneumonia and other infections

Alzheimer Disease

• Pathogenesis:– Genetic factors

• Amyloid precursor protein (APP)– Ch 21

– Deposition of beta-amyloid (senile plaques)

– Mutation in APP

– Toxic to neurons

• Presenilin 1

• Presenilin 2

Alzheimer Disease

• Pathogenesis:– Hyperphosphorylation of tau protein

• Deposition of tau protein

– Expression of ApoProtein E• Binds to APP

Alzheimer Disease

• Morphology:– Brain atrophy

• Frontal, temporal, parietal lobes (small gyri, wide sulci)• Dilated ventricles

– Micro:• Neurofibrillary tangles

– Contain tau protein

• Senile plaques– Contains amyloid beta

• Amyloid angiopathy• Lewy bodies

Parkinsonism

• Degenerative disease

• Affect motor function

• Rigidity, mask face, gait disturbance, slow voluntary movement, tremor

• Progress over years (10y)

• Dementia

• Death from infections or trauma (fall)

Parkinsonism

• Pathogenesis– Disturbance of dopaminergic pathway in substantia

nigra in the basal ganglia

– Can be due to Parkinson disease or due to trauma, toxins, vascular insult, encephalitis.

– Parkinson disease• Genetic/environmental

• Mutation in alpha-synuclein

• Degeneration of substantia nigra and locus ceruleus

• Sixth decade of life

Parkinsonism

• Morphology:– Depigmentation of substantia nigra and locus

ceruleus– Micro:

• Gliosis

• Loss of neurons

• Lewy bodies (intracytoplasmic inclusions contain alpha-synuclein and ubiquitin)

Huntington Disease

• Hereditary progressive fatal disorder

• Involve extra pyramidal motor system

• Involuntary movements (chorea)

• Dementia

• Autosomal dominant

• Appear in adulthood

Huntington Disease

• Gene: Huntingtin protein (ch 4)– Unknown function

• Trinucleotide repeat mutation– Normal: CAG: 6-34 repeat– Huntington diseas: CAG: 40-55 repeat– Early onset disease: CAG: 70 repeat

Huntington Disease

• Morphology:– Brain atrophy <1100g– Atrophy of caudate nucleus, and putamen– In advanced cases atrophy of globus pallidus– Dilated ventricles– Micro:

• Loss of neurons

• gliosis

Huntington Disease

• Clinical– 4th-5th decade– Anticipation phenomenon– Chorea– Seizure– Rigidity– Depression, cognitive impairment– Death: suicide, infections

Primary Disease of Myelin

Multiple Sclerosis

• Young adults 18-40y• Attack of neurological abnormalities in different

regions of the body• Autoimmune disease

– T cell mediated injury– Antibody mediated injury– Dystruction of myelin and oligodendrocytes

• Genetic: HLA-DR2• Environmental: regional risk

Multiple Sclerosis

• Morphology– Multiple plaques in brain, spinal cord– Common sites: peri-ventricular white matter,

optic nerve, white matter of spinal cord– Micro:

• Areas of demyelination • Lymphocytic infiltrate• Shadow plaques: axons with thin myelin (re

myelination)

Multiple Sclerosis

• Clinical– Visual disturbances, paresthesia, speech

disturbance, gait abnormalities– Cognitive impairment (not severe)– CSF: high protein, lymphocytes, gamma

globulin (oligoclonal band)– Some rapidly progress- death– Others have normal life span

Other Myelin diseases:

Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis

Central pontine myelinolysis

Leukodystrophies

Metabolic diseases

• Thiamine deficiency– Chronic alcoholics– Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome– Peripheral neuropathy– Wernick encephalopathy: confusion, paralysis,

ataxia– Korsakoff psychosis: memory loss– Findings: Mamillary body hemorrhage

Metabolic diseases

• Hepatic encephalopathy– Confusion– Flabbing tremor– Large astrocytes (Alzheimer type II)

Peripheral Neuropathy

Peripheral Neuropathy

• Axonal Degeneration

• Segmental Demyelination

Peripheral Neuropathy• Axonal Degeneration

– Wallerian degeneration• Injury to proximal part with degeneration of the

distal segment• Followed by regeneration (incomplete) • eg. Localized cut of nerve, vasculitis

– Distal axonal degeneration• eg. Generalized injury of cell bodies, thiamine

deficiency, toxic: lead, arsenic• Degeneration distally and extends proximally in

continuous fashion• Regeneration (incomplete)

Peripheral Neurophathy

• Segmental Demyelination:– Injury to myelin sheath (segmental)

– Preservation of axons

– poor conduction

– New myelin sheath (remyelination)

– “onion bulb” formation

– Secondary axonal degeneration

– eg. Hereditary neuropathy, Guillain-Barre syndrome, Leukodystrophies

Peripheral Neurophathy

• Clinical– Defect in motor, sensory or autonomic nerve– “Glove-and-stocking” distribution seen in distal

axonal degeneration– Motor: muscle weakness, atrophy– Loss of deep tendon reflexes– Postural hypotension, constipation

Guillain-Barre Syndrome

• Etiology: unknown• Follow viral infection, Mycoplasma, allergies,

surgery• ? Immune defect• Rapid, progressive ascending motor weakness• Minimal sensory loss• Death from involvement of respiratory muscle• Path: segmental demyelination with inflammatory

infiltrate

Neoplasm of Peripheral Nerve

• Schwannoma

• Neurofibroma

• Malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor

Schwannoma

• Well-circumscribed, encapsulated tumor

• At the edge of peripheral nerve

• Common in 8th cranial nerve (acoustic neuroma)

• Micro– Antoni A, Antoni B– Verocay bodies

Neurofibroma

• Solitary or multiple (neurofibromatosis)

• Mixture of schwann cells and fibroblasts

• Malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor