Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- Biographical note on F. H. Lewy
- Abbreviations
- Group photograph
- Introduction
- Part one Clinical issues
- Part two Pathological issues
- 15 Pathological significance of Lewy bodies in dementia
- 16 Tautological tangles in neuropathologic criteria for dementias associated with Lewy bodies
- 17 What is the neuropathological basis of dementia associated with Lewy bodies?
- 18 Cytoskeletal and Alzheimer-type pathology in Lewy body disease
- 19 Diffuse Lewy body disease within the spectrum of Lewy body disease
- 20 Temporal lobe immunohistochemical pathology for tangles, plaques and Lewy bodies in diffuse Lewy body disease, Parkinson's disease, and senile dementia of Alzheimer type
- 21 Pathological and clinical features of Parkinson's disease with and without dementia
- 22 Dementia with Lewy bodies: relationships to Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases
- 23 What do Lewy bodies tell us about dementia and parkinsonism?
- 24 Pathogenesis of the Lewy body
- 25 Altered tau processing: its role in development of dementia in Alzheimer's disease and Lewy body disease
- 26 Cytoskeletal pathology in Alzheimer's disease and Lewy body dementia – an epiphenomenon?
- 27 Genetic correlations in Lewy body disease
- Résumeacute; of pathological workshop sessions
- Part three Treatment issues
- Appendices
- Index
- Plate section
17 - What is the neuropathological basis of dementia associated with Lewy bodies?
from Part two - Pathological issues
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- Biographical note on F. H. Lewy
- Abbreviations
- Group photograph
- Introduction
- Part one Clinical issues
- Part two Pathological issues
- 15 Pathological significance of Lewy bodies in dementia
- 16 Tautological tangles in neuropathologic criteria for dementias associated with Lewy bodies
- 17 What is the neuropathological basis of dementia associated with Lewy bodies?
- 18 Cytoskeletal and Alzheimer-type pathology in Lewy body disease
- 19 Diffuse Lewy body disease within the spectrum of Lewy body disease
- 20 Temporal lobe immunohistochemical pathology for tangles, plaques and Lewy bodies in diffuse Lewy body disease, Parkinson's disease, and senile dementia of Alzheimer type
- 21 Pathological and clinical features of Parkinson's disease with and without dementia
- 22 Dementia with Lewy bodies: relationships to Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases
- 23 What do Lewy bodies tell us about dementia and parkinsonism?
- 24 Pathogenesis of the Lewy body
- 25 Altered tau processing: its role in development of dementia in Alzheimer's disease and Lewy body disease
- 26 Cytoskeletal pathology in Alzheimer's disease and Lewy body dementia – an epiphenomenon?
- 27 Genetic correlations in Lewy body disease
- Résumeacute; of pathological workshop sessions
- Part three Treatment issues
- Appendices
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
Summary
Two alternative hypotheses – that there is either a unitary or a multiple neuropathological basis for dementia in diseases associated with Lewy bodies – are considered in relation to Parkinson's disease (PD) and Lewy body dementia (LBD including senile dementia of Lewy body type, SDLT). Densities of limbic (cingulate) cortical Lewy bodies, neocortical Lewy bodies, neocortical plaques, neocortical tangles, Braak staging, and Apo E frequency have been quantified in PD (demented and nondemented), SDLT, and Alzheimer's disease (AD with presenile and senile onset). Of these parameters the mean density of cingulate Lewy bodies is significantly greater in SDLT compared with all PD cases. There is no obvious correlation between Lewy body density and cognitive impairment assessed using a simple test of mental ability, and other measures of mental function in LBD may need to be considered. Since there is no absolute density of limbic Lewy bodies that clearly differentiates SDLT or demented PD cases from all nondemented PD cases, neuropathological criteria may need to incorporate severity of Alzheimer-type pathology as an additional optional factor. Mean neocortical plaque density is significantly lower in SDLT compared with AD cases but it is also significantly higher than in demented and nondemented PD cases, and higher than densities in normals. Even so, neocortical plaque density does not itself differentiate all SDLT cases from the normal. It is likely that the biological basis for dementia or psychoses in LBD, a cardinal feature of which is fluctuating symptomatology, is in part a functional or neurochemical abnormality.
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- Information
- Dementia with Lewy BodiesClinical, Pathological, and Treatment Issues, pp. 212 - 223Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1996
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