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Histopathology of diffusion-weighted imaging-positive lesions in cerebral amyloid angiopathy

Authors :
Telgte, A. ter
Scherlek, A.A.
Reijmer, Y.D.
Kouwe, A.J. van der
Harten, T. van
Duering, M.
Bacskai, B.J.
Leeuw, F.E. de
Frosch, M.P.
Greenberg, S.M.
Veluw, S.J. van
Telgte, A. ter
Scherlek, A.A.
Reijmer, Y.D.
Kouwe, A.J. van der
Harten, T. van
Duering, M.
Bacskai, B.J.
Leeuw, F.E. de
Frosch, M.P.
Greenberg, S.M.
Veluw, S.J. van
Source :
Acta Neuropathologica; 799; 812; 0001-6322; 5; 139; ~Acta Neuropathologica~799~812~~~0001-6322~5~139~~
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Contains fulltext : 220659.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access)<br />Small subclinical hyperintense lesions are frequently encountered on brain diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) scans of patients with cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA). Interpretation of these DWI+ lesions, however, has been limited by absence of histopathological examination. We aimed to determine whether DWI+ lesions represent acute microinfarcts on histopathology in brains with advanced CAA, using a combined in vivo MRI-ex vivo MRI-histopathology approach. We first investigated the histopathology of a punctate cortical DWI+ lesion observed on clinical in vivo MRI 7 days prior to death in a CAA case. Subsequently, we assessed the use of ex vivo DWI to identify similar punctate cortical lesions post-mortem. Intact formalin-fixed hemispheres of 12 consecutive cases with CAA and three non-CAA controls were subjected to high-resolution 3 T ex vivo DWI and T2 imaging. Small cortical lesions were classified as either DWI+/T2+ or DWI-/T2+. A representative subset of lesions from three CAA cases was selected for detailed histopathological examination. The DWI+ lesion observed on in vivo MRI could be matched to an area with evidence of recent ischemia on histopathology. Ex vivo MRI of the intact hemispheres revealed a total of 130 DWI+/T2+ lesions in 10/12 CAA cases, but none in controls (p = 0.022). DWI+/T2+ lesions examined histopathologically proved to be acute microinfarcts (classification accuracy 100%), characterized by presence of eosinophilic neurons on hematoxylin and eosin and absence of reactive astrocytes on glial fibrillary acidic protein-stained sections. In conclusion, we suggest that small DWI+ lesions in CAA represent acute microinfarcts. Furthermore, our findings support the use of ex vivo DWI as a method to detect acute microinfarcts post-mortem, which may benefit future histopathological investigations on the etiology of microinfarcts.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Acta Neuropathologica; 799; 812; 0001-6322; 5; 139; ~Acta Neuropathologica~799~812~~~0001-6322~5~139~~
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1284100691
Document Type :
Electronic Resource