1. Neuronal Loss and Α-Synuclein Pathology in the Superior Colliculus and Its Relationship to Visual Hallucinations in Dementia with Lewy Bodies.
- Author
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Erskine D, Thomas AJ, Taylor JP, Savage MA, Attems J, McKeith IG, Morris CM, and Khundakar AA
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Alzheimer Disease complications, Alzheimer Disease metabolism, Alzheimer Disease pathology, Case-Control Studies, Cell Count, Female, Hallucinations complications, Humans, Lewy Body Disease complications, Male, Middle Aged, Tauopathies complications, Tauopathies metabolism, Tauopathies pathology, Hallucinations pathology, Lewy Body Disease metabolism, Lewy Body Disease pathology, Nerve Degeneration pathology, Superior Colliculi metabolism, Superior Colliculi pathology, alpha-Synuclein metabolism
- Abstract
Objective: Patients with dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) often experience visual hallucinations, which are related to decreased quality of life for patients and increased caregiver distress. The pathologic changes that contribute to visual hallucinations are not known, but several hypotheses implicate deficient attentional processing. The superior colliculus has a role in visual attention and planning eye movements and has been directly implicated in several models of visual hallucinations. Therefore, the present study sought to identify neurodegenerative changes that may contribute to hallucinations in DLB., Methods: Postmortem superior colliculus tissue from 13 comparison, 10 DLB, and 10 Alzheimer disease (AD) cases was evaluated using quantitative neuropathologic methods., Results: α-Synuclein and tau deposition were more severe in deeper layers of the superior colliculus. DLB cases had neuronal density reductions in the stratum griseum intermedium, an important structure in directing attention toward visual targets. In contrast, neuronal density was reduced in all laminae of the superior colliculus in AD., Conclusion: These findings suggest that regions involved in directing attention toward visual targets are subject to neurodegenerative changes in DLB. Considering several hypotheses of visual hallucinations implicating dysfunctional attention toward external stimuli, these findings may provide evidence of pathologic changes that contribute to the manifestation of visual hallucinations in DLB., (Copyright © 2017 American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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