CNS path Flashcards
Parkinsonism
extrapyramidal symptoms- degeneratin outside motor tracts
motor strength is normal
pill rolling tremor resting tremor, stooped posture, slowness of movement, shuffling gait, diminished facies
parkinsons disease morphology
loss of pigment in substantia nigra
lewy bodies with pigmented neuronal cell loss and gliosis
parkinson’s path and pathogenesis
a-synuclein gene- found in large mts in lewy body
ubiquitin related enzymes
pigmented nerve cell loss, lewy body in brainstem and cortex
10-15% develop dementia
dementia with lewy bodies
dementia, parkinsonian features, hallucinations, rapid progression
will have brainstem lewy body pathology identical to parkinson disease often with cortical lewy bodies, plus alzheimer disease pathology
toxic parkinsonism
acute parkinsonian syndrome and destruction in substantia nigra follows exposure to MPTP (contaminant in illicit synthesis of psychoactive meperidine analogs)
dementia pugilistica
seen in professonal boxers, retired NFL football palyers
called chronic traumatic encephalopathy
neuronal microtrauma due to repeated blows to head- gliosis and destruction of nigrostriatal neurons is end stage resulting in clinical disease identical to parkinson
multiple system atrophy (MSA)
find oligodendroglial a-synuclein positive inclusions (not in neurons)
parkinsonism, autonomic failure, cerebellar findings
Huntington disease
AD genetic disorder
Choreiform movements, cognitive deterioration, emotional disturbances
HD gene- chr 4, unstable trinucleotide repeat (37-86 copies CAG vs 19 in normal controls coding for glutamic acid)
complete dominance
gross- atrophic, flattened caudate
microscopic- cell loss and gliosis in caudate nucleus
huntington’s genetics
children inheriting gene from father have either juvenile onset disease or onset approx 3 years early (anticipation)
onset typically in 4th-5th decade
amyloid precursor protein coded for on
chromosome 21
alzheimer disease occurs in nearly all down syndrome (trisomy 21) pts by age of 45
abnormal APP processing leads to deposits of insoluble B-pleated amyloid protein
alzheimer’s impairment of
recent memory
aphasia- naming
apraxia- motor
agnosia- object
dimunition of executive function- making change, keeping track of time
pneumonia is often the final mechanism death
alzheimer’s
most common cause of dementia in elderly (65%)
short term memory and executive fxn most severly affected cognitive features
degenerative cell loss leads to gross atorophy of entire brain with hydrocephalus ex vacuo
neuritic plaques, neurofibrillary tangles, cell loss and gliosis, granulovacuolar degeneration, amyloid angiopathy
Pick disease
pre-senil: onset 45-65 years
80% sporadic
frontal lobe dementia- personality changes, haphazard behavior, lack of planning, anti-social, ocd, language deficits
anterior temporal lobe symptoms- fluent aphasia, semantic memory loss, kluver bucy syndrome
memory is relatively retained
gross appearance of pick disease
localized atrophy of frontal lobes and anterior temporal lobes, knife edge atrophy; left>right
pick cells (ballooned neurons) and pick bodies with cell loss and gliosis - anti- tau
dementia of frontal lobe type
picks disease without pick cells or pick bodies