Increased levels of tumor necrosis factor-alpha messenger RNA were not associated with increased levels of IL-1 beta messenger RNA, suggesting differential regulation of these monokines in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome dementia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
The data provide further evidence for altered hsp gene expression in dementia, and support the existence of a stress response occurring in brains affected by such diseases.
Since the report of a double mutation at codons 670 and 671 of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) gene identified in two Swedish families with clinically diagnosed Alzheimer's disease (AD), a carrier with dementia has died.
This variant GSS with codon 105 mutation has been found in four pedigrees, only in Japan up to the present, and the clinicopathological phenotype is summarized as follows: (1) onset at age 38-48, with a duration of 7-11 years, (2) prominent spastic paraparesis, associated with dementia and ataxia, (3) numerous amyloid plaques in the cerebral cortex, (4) amorphous PrP deposits with neuronal loss in the deep cortical layers, and (5) minor change of cerebellum.
Genetic analysis performed on a large Thai kindred with autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia, in which frontal lobe signs and dementia are commonly observed in affected family members, exclude linkage to the SCA1, SCA2 and MJD loci.
Genetic analysis performed on a large Thai kindred with autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia, in which frontal lobe signs and dementia are commonly observed in affected family members, exclude linkage to the SCA1, SCA2 and MJD loci.
Genetic analysis performed on a large Thai kindred with autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia, in which frontal lobe signs and dementia are commonly observed in affected family members, exclude linkage to the SCA1, SCA2 and MJD loci.
These data indicate that CSF levels of A beta decrease with advancing severity of dementia in AD and suggest that they are independent of a patient's Apo E genotype.
To assess physician knowledge of the lifetime risk of AD and the effect of APOE genotyping on the risk, 50 neurologists, internists, geriatricians, geriatric psychiatrists, and family physicians who manage patients with dementia were randomly selected to participate in a questionnaire-driven telephone survey.
Apolipoprotein E allele 4 (apo E epsilon 4) is known to be in genetic disequilibrium with Alzheimer's disease and is associated with an earlier age at onset of dementia.
The Apolipoprotein E (APOE) epsilon 4 allele has been found to be strongly associated with Alzheimer's disease (AD) in most studies conducted up to now, though not all investigators have established a similar association with other forms of dementia, like vascular dementia.
In contrast, a recent case with proven P102L mutation of the PRNP gene had rapidly developing dementia and severe cortical damage indistinguishable from the clinicopathological phenotype of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD).
A population-based study of tau protein and ubiquitin in cerebrospinal fluid in 85-year-olds: relation to severity of dementia and cerebral atrophy, but not to the apolipoprotein E4 allele.
Apolipoprotein E type epsilon 4 alleles are increased in both Alzheimer's disease (AD) and cortical Lewy body dementia, while the epsilon 2 allele has been associated as a protective factor against the development of dementia in AD.