Histopathology 20: Neurodegeneration Flashcards
What are prion diseases ?
Prions are proteinaceous infections particles. They can cause Prion protein (PrP) to miss fold and become soluble.
This can cause neurodegenerative diseases in humans.
What is the main sign of prion disease ?
Rapid neurodegenerative decline
List 4 Prion types of prion diseases seen in humans ?
CJD- Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
GSSS- gerstmann-straussler-sheinker syndrome
Kuru
Fatal familial insomnia
List 2 common features of prion diseases on histology ?
Spongiform change
Prion protein deposition
Describe the progression in symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease ?
recent memory loss (cognitive) -> dressing apraxia (parietal lobe) -> executive function problems, personality changes, disinhibition (frontal lobe)
List the classical pathological features of Alzheimer’s disease ?
Extracellular plaques
Neurofibrillary tangles
Cerebral amyloid angiopathy
Neuronal loss (cerebral atrophy)
What is the protein responsible for plaque formation in Alzheimer’s disease ?
Amyloid-beta
How is the Amyloid-beta protein formed ?
APP (amyloid precursor protein) is cleaved by enzymes in the cell membrane.
Why is Tau protein a useful marker in neuropathology (Braak staging) ?
It spreads throughout the brain and the parts it affects is closely related to the symptoms seen in the patient.
What disease with tauopathy is commonly seen in boxers ?
Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy
Occurs after multiple repetitive traumatic head injuries
The presence of ………. characterises Parkinson’s disease
Lewy bodies
Death of……… cells from the ………….up to the basal ganglia causes Parkinson’s disease
Dopaminergic
Substantial nigra
What are Lewy bodies ?
Accumulation of the protein Alpha-synuclein.
Seen as Smooth hyaline inclusions in the pigmented cells of the substantia nigra.
What is the gold standard test for Parkinson’s disease ?
Alpha-synuclein immunostaining
Where in the brain does Alzheimer’s disease originate ?
The temporal lobe (hippocampus)