| Literature DB >> 26788328 |
Brian W Starr1, Matthew C Hagen2, Alberto J Espay1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hydrocephalus is an under-recognized presentation of progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) and dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB).Entities:
Keywords: Dementia with Lewy bodies; Normal pressure hydrocephalus; Progressive supranuclear palsy; Ventriculomegaly
Year: 2014 PMID: 26788328 PMCID: PMC4677733 DOI: 10.1186/2054-7072-1-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Mov Disord ISSN: 2054-7072
Figure 1Neuroimaging of the NPH suspected cases. Head CT (A) and FLAIR sequences of brain MRI (B-D) for cases 1–4 (A-D) showed mild to moderate ventriculomegaly (upper row), with relatively mild or absent (Case 3) associated parenchymal atrophy as judged by the apical axial cuts (middle row). Some degree of midbrain atrophy is appreciable in all cases, including the one ultimately diagnosed as DLB on pathology (C) despite a clinical picture that suggested a rapidly progressive form of PSP. Leukoencephalomalacia in the right cerebellar hemisphere and left parasagittal frontal lobe was due to remote stroke in Case 4.
Figure 2Neuropathology images of selected cases. A. (Case 1) Coronal section demonstrating enlargement of the anterior horns of the lateral ventricles. B. (Case 1) Tufted astrocytes and tau positive neurons in the caudate nucleus (tau stain (AT8), magnification 200×). C. (Case 1) Coiled bodies in the parietal white matter (tau stain (AT8), magnification 400×). D. (Case 1) Tufted astrocytes and tau positive neurons in the parietal cortex (tau stain (AT8), magnification 200×). E. (Case 3) Lewy bodies in the substantia nigra (H&E, magnification 400×). F. (Case 3) Substantia nigra, Lewy bodies and Lewy neuritis (alpha-synuclein, magnification 200×).
NPH-like presentations for pathology-confirmed PSP and DLB cases: summary of the published literature
| Case | Age, gender | Disease duration at presentation | Initial clinical features | Late clinical features | Response to VPS | Pathology |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 [ | 82, F* | 1.1 years | GD, CI, UI, postural instability | N/A | Transient improvement in GD/UI; worse at 3 years | PSP |
| 2 [ | 77, M♣ | N/A | GD, CI, UI | N/A | VPS placed, outcome data not available | PSP |
| 3 [ | 78, F | 2 years | GD, CI, UI, falls, generalized bradykinesia, dysarthria | Restriction of vertical eye movements, hypophonia, frontal release signs | Not placed | PSP |
| 4 [ | 68, M | 4 months | GD, CI, UI, gait ignition failure, falls, hypomimia, micrographia | Restriction of vertical gaze, slow saccades, dysarthria, gait freezing | Transient improvement but progressive dementia | PSP |
| 5 [ | 66, F | 2 years | GD, CI, falls, micrographia | Restriction of vertical gaze, slow saccades, dysarthria, dysphagia, gait freezing, dementia | Transient improvement in GD/CI but progressive dementia | PSP |
| 6 [ | 69, M | N/A | GD, CI, UI | VSGP, akinesia, rigidity | 6-month “marked” improvement in GD, CI, and UI | PSP |
| 7 [ | 66, F♦ | 3.1 years | GD, CI, UI, postural instability | “Clinical diagnosis of DLB” | Some improvement in GD at 3–6 months; no improvement at 3 years | DLB |
| 8 [ | 80, M♠ | N/A | GD, CI | N/A | VPS placed, outcome data not available | DLB |
| 9 [ | 87, F | 2 years | GD, CI, UI | Postural instability, falls, rare visual hallucinations | Initial marked improvement in GD/CI – No follow-up data. | DLB |
GD: gait disturbance; CI: cognitive impairment; UI: urinary incontinence; VSGP: vertical supranuclear gaze palsy. *: VPS placed at 82 (no age at presentation given); ♣: Death at 77 (no age at presentation given); ♦: VPS placed at 66 (no age at presentation given); ♠: Death at 80 (no age at presentation given).