1. Entorhinal neurofibrillary tangles in Alzheimer disease with Lewy bodies
- Author
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Eliezer Masliah, Douglas A. Rexin, Sylvia Quijada-Fawcett, and Lawrence A. Hansen
- Subjects
Aged, 80 and over ,Cerebral Cortex ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Developmental stage ,Lewy body ,General Neuroscience ,Neurofibrillary Tangles ,Neurofibrillary tangle ,Hippocampal formation ,medicine.disease ,Entorhinal cortex ,Degenerative disease ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Alzheimer Disease ,Neurites ,medicine ,Humans ,Lewy Bodies ,Senile plaques ,Alzheimer's disease ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Aged - Abstract
Entorhinal cortex is the major source of hippocampal afferents. Its neurons, especially in layer 2, develop neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) in Alzheimer disease (AD). We quantified entorhinal NFTs in cases of AD, elderly controls, and in brains with both AD pathology and subcortical and neocortical Lewy bodies, (a Lewy body variant, LBV). A nosologic controversy hinges on whether LBVs are a form of AD or a different disease, since they have few neocortical NFTs and their neuritic plaques often lack paired helical filament immunoreactivity. The LBVs had more entorhinal NFTs than controls (P less than 0.001), but fewer than ADs (P less than 0.02), despite comparable numbers of neuritic plaques. AD pathology in LBVs is of moderate severity, or perhaps in an earlier developmental stage.
- Published
- 1991
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