| Literature DB >> 9521256 |
P Brown1, L Cervenáková, L McShane, L G Goldfarb, K Bishop, F Bastian, J Kirkpatrick, P Piccardo, B Ghetti, D C Gajdusek.
Abstract
A 53-year-old man died of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) after a 1.5-year clinical course. Four and a half years later, his then 55-year-old widow died from CJD after a 1-month illness. Both patients had typical clinical and neuropathologic features of the disease, and pathognomonic proteinase-resistant amyloid protein ("prion" protein, or PrP) was present in both brains. Neither patient had a family history of neurologic disease, and molecular genetic analysis of their PrP genes was normal. No medical, surgical, or dietary antecedent of CJD was identified; therefore, we are left with the unanswerable alternatives of human-to-human transmission or the chance occurrence of sporadic CJD in a husband and wife.Entities:
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Year: 1998 PMID: 9521256 DOI: 10.1212/wnl.50.3.684
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurology ISSN: 0028-3878 Impact factor: 9.910