Literature DB >> 9703445

Morphometric analysis of the peripheral neuropathy of AIDS.

W G Bradley1, P Shapshak, S Delgado, I Nagano, R Stewart, B Rocha.   

Abstract

A morphometric study of the peripheral nervous system at autopsy was undertaken in 11 AIDS patients and 10 controls. The left L4, L5, and S1 dorsal root ganglia (DRG) and samples of the sciatic nerve at the buttock, tibial nerve at the knee, and sural nerve at the ankle were collected. Indices of neuronal/axonal degeneration and of segmental demyelination/ remyelination were measured at each level. The small number of cases and evidence of neuropathy in a number of the control cases resulted in statistical significance for only a limited number of comparisons. Nodules of Nageotte in the DRG were increased fivefold in AIDS cases compared with controls, and axonal degeneration in single-teased nerve fibers was increased 9-fold in the sciatic nerve, 28-fold in the tibial nerve, and 12-fold in the sural nerve. The ratios of AIDS to controls for the density of remaining DRG neurons and large myelinated axons were reduced to 0.71 in the DRG, 0.84 in the sciatic nerve, 0.84 in the tibial nerve, and 0.66 in the sural nerve. Axonal regeneration in single-teased nerve fibers was increased threefold at the sciatic nerve level in AIDS, but was markedly reduced at distal levels. Acute segmental demyelination in single-teased nerve fibers was present to a greater extent than in controls at all levels of the peripheral nerves in the AIDS cases. Remyelinating fibers were increased compared with controls only in the proximal sciatic nerve. No case showed the changes of cytomegalovirus infection. In a parallel immunohistochemical study of these AIDS peripheral nerves, T-cell and macrophage infiltration, with cytokine expression, was demonstrated. The pathological process in the neuropathy of terminal AIDS appears to be a multifocal immunologically mediated inflammatory disease, with increased density of macrophages and T cells at all levels of the peripheral nervous system, producing segmental demyelination and axonal degeneration. Reparative processes (axonal regeneration and remyelination) occurred only at the most proximal levels of the nerves.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9703445     DOI: 10.1002/(sici)1097-4598(199809)21:9<1188::aid-mus10>3.0.co;2-o

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Muscle Nerve        ISSN: 0148-639X            Impact factor:   3.217


  7 in total

1.  Evidence that Wallerian degeneration and localized axon degeneration induced by local neurotrophin deprivation do not involve caspases.

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Review 2.  Schwann cells as a therapeutic target for peripheral neuropathies.

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3.  Macrophage-mediated dorsal root ganglion damage precedes altered nerve conduction in SIV-infected macaques.

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Review 4.  [HIV-associated neuropathies].

Authors:  K Hahn; I W Husstedt
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5.  Proteinase-activated receptor-1 mediates dorsal root ganglion neuronal degeneration in HIV/AIDS.

Authors:  Shaona Acharjee; Yu Zhu; Ferdinand Maingat; Carlos Pardo; Klaus Ballanyi; Morley D Hollenberg; Christopher Power
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6.  Differential effects of HIV infected macrophages on dorsal root ganglia neurons and axons.

Authors:  Katrin Hahn; Barry Robinson; Caroline Anderson; Wenxue Li; Carlos A Pardo; Susan Morgello; David Simpson; Avindra Nath
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7.  Vascularization of the dorsal root ganglia and peripheral nerve of the mouse: implications for chemical-induced peripheral sensory neuropathies.

Authors:  Juan M Jimenez-Andrade; Monica B Herrera; Joseph R Ghilardi; Marina Vardanyan; Ohannes K Melemedjian; Patrick W Mantyh
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  7 in total

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