| Literature DB >> 23420606 |
Abstract
Neuropathology of hyperkinetic movement disorders can be very challenging. This paper starts with basic functional anatomy of the basal ganglia in order to appreciate that focal lesions like for instance tumor or infarction can cause hyperkinetic movement disorders like (hemi)ballism. The neuropathology of different causes of chorea (amongst others Huntington's disease, neuroacanthosis, and HLD-2) and dystonia (DYT1, PD, and Dopa-Responsive Dystonia) are described. Besides the functional anatomy of the basal ganglia a wider anatomical network view is provided. This forms the basis for the overview of the neuropathology of different forms of tremor.Entities:
Keywords: ballism; chorea; dystonia; neurodegeneration; neuropathology; tremor
Year: 2013 PMID: 23420606 PMCID: PMC3572425 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2013.00007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Macroscopic pictures of human brain sections with superimposed schematic drawings showing striatal input (A), striatal output (B), the direct (C), and indirect (D) pathways. Striatal input comes from 1: motor cortex, 2: thalamus, 3: oral raphe nuclei, and 4: substantia nigra. Striatal output is via 1: extern pallidum, 2: intern pallidum, and 3: substantia nigra. The blue arrows in (C) and (D) indicate stimulatory/glutamatergic neurotransmission and the red arrows inhibitory/GABAergic neurotransmission.
Figure 2Schematic representations of the combined direct and indirect pathways in health (A) and disease. The colors of the anatomical structures and the arrows correspond with Figure 1. As Parkinson’s disease is the second most occurring form of neurodegenerative disease, it is mentioned here in (B). Due to degeneration of the substantia nigra (SN), the subthalamic nucleus (STN) becomes hyperactive. STN deep brain stimulation (C) restores this disbalance again. Degeneration of the striatum in for instance Huntington’s disease (D), the STN in for instance infarcts (E), or the pallidum (F) will lead to different forms of hyperkinesia.
Figure 3Micrographs of the striatum in Huntington’s disease. (A) Shows a normal age matched control (H&E staining). In (B) the number of neurons is lower and astrogliosis is already apparent. (C) Shows a GFAP immunohistochemical staining highlighting the astrogliosis. In (D) the hallmark lesion: neuronal intranuclear inclusion can be observed. (E,F) Show 1c2 immunohistochemistry. In neuron in (E) also shows diffuse nuclear staining as well as granular cytoplasmic staining. (F) Shows aggregated polyQ protein in a neurite.
Figure 4Micrographs of the mesencephalon in Parkinson’s disease (A–C), mutiple system atrophy (D) and progressive supranuclear palsy (E–G). (A) Shows an H&E staining of the substantia nigra with neuronal degeneration and phagocytosis of neuromelanin (arrows). (B) Shows a neuron with two classical Lewy bodies. (C) Shows alfa-synuclein staining with positive staining of a Lewy body (long arrow) and Lewy neuritis (short arrows). MSA is also an alfa-synucleinopathy (D) with both neuronal (long arrow) and oligodendroglial (short arrows) inclusions. (E) Shows a neuron in PSP with a filamentous basophilic inclusion (H&E staining). (F,G) Show immunohistochemical stainings for hyperphosphorylated tau-protein (AT8 clone) with inclusions in a neuron and “tufted” astrocyte respectively.
Figure 5Scheme showing a more extensive neuroanatomical view to understand some forms of dystonia and tremor.
Figure 6Micrographs showing a normal cerebellar cortex (A) and (B) as well as cerebellar cortical degeneration (C–F). In (A) (H&E staining) and (B) (GFAP staining) the molecular layer (ml), Purkinje cell layer (pc), granular layer (gl), and cerebellar white matter (wm) can be readily distinguished. (C–F) Show respectively Purkinje cell and granular cell loss with formation of axonal torpedoes [short arrow in (D)], empty baskets [arrows in (E)], and Bergmann astrogliosis where the Purkinje cells have disappeared.
known neuropathology in hyperkinetic disorders described in this article.
| Hyperkinetic disorder | Disease | Description of neuropathology | Immunohistochemistry | Future directions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chorea | HD | Degeneration in striatum, frontal cortex, brain stem, cerebellum + gliosis + protein inclusions | 1C2+/huntingtin+ | |
| Neuroacanthosis | Striatal degeneration + gliosis (no protein inclusions) | 1C2− | ||
| DRPLA | Degeneration in pallidum, STN, dentate, and red nucleus + protein inclusions | 1C2+/atrophin-1 | ||
| SCA17 | Degeneration in striatum, ventral thalamus, SN, inferior olive, cerebellum + protein inclusions | 1C2+/TBP | ||
| HDL2 | Degeneration and protein inclusions largely comparable to HD | 1C2+ | ||
| HDL1 | ?? | Neuropathology? | ||
| HDL3 | ?? | Neuropathology? | ||
| Dystonia | DYT1 | Degeneration of SNc, LC, raphe nuclei, PPN, and dentate | Ub+, TorsinA+ | Concomitant tangles/Lewy bodies? |
| DYT6 and DYT11 | ?? | Neuropathology? | ||
| DYT5/DYT14 | SN neurodegeneration; 1 case with Lewy bodies | Concomitant Lewy bodies? | ||
| LUBAG/DYT3 | Mosaic neuronal loss in caudate and lateral putamen + gliosis | |||
| PD | Diffuse degeneration throughout the CNS (six stages) with Lewy bodies, pale bodies, and Lewy neurites | Alfa-synuclein | ||
| PSP | Degeneration of SN, locus coeruleus, pons, midbrain, pallidum + neuronal and glial protein inclusions | tau | ||
| CBD | Degeneration in SN, pallidum, striatum, STN, thalamus, and red nucleus + neuronal and glial protein inclusions | tau | ||
| MSA | Variable degeneration of olivo-ponto-cerebellar system and basal ganglia + neuronal + glial protein inclusions | Alfa-synuclein | ||
| Tremor | ET | Cerebellar cortical degeneration | LB in brainstem concomitant? Ub+/p62+ nii specific? | |
| PD | See above | Alfa-synuclein | ||
| Cerebellar tremor | Lesions in cerebellum or fiber tracts from deep cerebellar nuclei | |||
| Holmes tremor | Lesions in ventrolateral thalamus/red nucleus or surrounding fiber tracts | |||
| Palatal tremor | Degeneration of dentate-olivary pathway + secondary hypertrophy of inferior olive | |||
| Li induced tremor | Neuronal loss + gliosis in cerebellar cortex and dentate nucleus |