| Literature DB >> 34047818 |
Zane Jaunmuktane1,2, Gargi Banerjee3, Simon Paine4, Adrian Parry-Jones5,6, Peter Rudge3,7, Joan Grieve8, Ahmed K Toma8, Simon F Farmer9,10, Simon Mead3,7, Henry Houlden11,12, David J Werring10,12,13, Sebastian Brandner14,15.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34047818 PMCID: PMC8217014 DOI: 10.1007/s00401-021-02326-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol ISSN: 0001-6322 Impact factor: 17.088
Fig. 1Amyloid-β and tau pathology in cases 1–3 with an overview of Aβ pathology (a, f, k), tau pathology (b, g, l) and high power details of pre-tangles (c, h, m), tangles (d, i, n) and neuritic plaques (e, j, o), detected with antibodies against Amyloid-β (Clone 6F3D, DAKO M0872) and Tau (Clone AT8, Thermo MN1020). In three comparison cases with comparable incubation periods and similarly widespread Aβ load (p, s, v), there is minimal tau pathology: comparison case 1, incubation 37 years (case 1 in [1]; q, r, comparison case 2, incubation 35 years (case 3 in [16]) t, u, and comparison case 3, incubation 36 years (case 4 in [16]) w, x. Comparison cases are also highlighted with an asterisk (*) in Fig. 2
Fig. 2Visualisation of iatrogenic Aβ pathology incubation times in the current and in published studies. Left columns, first author and publication year, and case ID in the respective publication, where indicated. Centre, timeline of reported incubation times. Each diamond indicates a published case. Cases with incubation times of 35 and more years are highlighted in dark grey (published) and red (this study). The reported presence of tau pathology is indicated in the four columns on the right. The column on the far right indicates the sample type (Bx—diagnosed on biopsy; PM—diagnosed on post-mortem material; PET—diagnosed on in vivo PET imaging). * (leftmost column) indicate three comparison cases shown in Fig. 1; ** (column “threads in cortex”) highlight cases, where rare neocortical threads or granular tau pathology were reported in the context of abnormal prion protein pathology; *** (columns “NFT (neurofibrillary tangles) in cortex” and “pre-tangles in cortex”) corresponds to a case in which tau pathology is seen in the medial temporal lobe but not in the neocortex. °For case 1 it is unknown if a cadaver-derived dural graft was used during neurosurgery