The clinical spectrum of cerebral amyloid angiopathy

Cerebral amyloid angiopathy is a common cause of spontaneous lobar hemorrhage in elderly patients. We discuss seven patients with amyloid angiopathy presenting without major lobar hemorrhage. The patients' presentations fell into two groups: recurrent transient neurologic symptoms and rapidly progressive dementia. The cases with transient episodes had a spread of symptoms to contiguous body areas during episodes. Each had evidence of small hemorrhage or subsequent large hemorrhage in the cortical location corresponding to the symptoms, suggesting petechial hemorrhage with focal seizure as the cause of the transient spells. Three cases of dementia developed with relatively rapid time courses, progressing from intact baseline to profound dementia in spans of a few days to 2 years. Pathologic abnormalities, in addition to amyloid angiopathy, included patchy white matter demyelination and tissue loss, petechial cortical hemorrhages, cortical infarctions, and a variable degree of neuritic plaques and neurofibrillary tangles. The clinical spectrum of cerebral amyloid angiopathy includes these two neurologic syndromes.

[1]  H. Vinters Cerebral amyloid angiopathy and alzheimer's disease: two entities or one? , 1992, Journal of the Neurological Sciences.

[2]  T. Mandybur,et al.  Cerebral amyloid angiopathy with granulomatous angiitis ameliorated by steroid-cytoxan treatment. , 1992, Clinical neuropharmacology.

[3]  J. Vonsattel,et al.  Cerebral amyloid angiopathy without and with cerebral hemorrhages: A comparative histological study , 1991, Annals of neurology.

[4]  Y. Yamashita,et al.  The significance of cerebrovascular amyloid in the aetiology of superficial (lobar) cerebral haemorrhage and its incidence in the elderly population , 1991, The Journal of pathology.

[5]  O. Lopez,et al.  Alzheimer’s disease, cerebral amyloid angiopathy, and dementia of acute onset , 1991, Aging.

[6]  R. Tracy,et al.  Intracerebral hemorrhage related to cerebral amyloid angiopathy and T‐PA treatment , 1991, Annals of neurology.

[7]  H. Hendricks,et al.  Cerebral amyloid angiopathy , 1990, Neurology.

[8]  H. Vinters,et al.  Immunohistochemical study of cerebral amyloid angiopathy. III. Widespread alzheimer A4 peptide in cerebral microvessel walls colocalizes with gamma trace in patients with leukoencephalopathy , 1990, Annals of neurology.

[9]  R. Roos,et al.  Hereditary Cerebral Hemorrhage With Amyloidosis-Dutch Type: Clinical and Computed Tomographic Analysis of 24 Cases , 1990 .

[10]  W. Yuh,et al.  Leukoencephalopathy in cerebral amyloid angiopathy: MR imaging in four cases. , 1990, AJNR. American journal of neuroradiology.

[11]  Donald H. Lee,et al.  Neuropathologic correlates of leuko-araiosis. , 1989, Archives of neurology.

[12]  D. Selkoe,et al.  Clinically diagnosed Alzheimer's disease: Autopsy results in 150 cases , 1988, Annals of neurology.

[13]  T. Omae,et al.  Autopsy study of incidence and distribution of cerebral amyloid angiopathy in Hisayama, Japan. , 1988, Stroke.

[14]  C. Bergeron,et al.  Amyloid Angiopathy in Alzheimer's Disease , 1987, Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences / Journal Canadien des Sciences Neurologiques.

[15]  H. Vinters Cerebral amyloid angiopathy. A critical review. , 1987, Stroke.

[16]  M. Lauritzen Cortical spreading depression as a putative migraine mechanism , 1987, Trends in Neurosciences.

[17]  M. Esiri,et al.  Cerebral amyloid angiopathy in dementia and old age. , 1986, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[18]  R. Gherardi,et al.  Post-anoxic delayed encephalopathy with leukoencephalopathy and non-hemorrhagic cerebral amyloid angiopathy. , 1986, Clinical neuropathology.

[19]  D. Selkoe,et al.  Isolation of Low‐Molecular‐Weight Proteins from Amyloid Plaque Fibers in Alzheimer's Disease , 1986, Journal of neurochemistry.

[20]  T. Mandybur Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy: The Vascular Pathology and Complications , 1986, Journal of neuropathology and experimental neurology.

[21]  R. Martins,et al.  Neuronal origin of a cerebral amyloid: neurofibrillary tangles of Alzheimer's disease contain the same protein as the amyloid of plaque cores and blood vessels. , 1985, The EMBO journal.

[22]  R. Escourolle,et al.  Leukoencephalopathy in diffuse hemorrhagic cerebral amyloid angiopathy , 1985, Annals of neurology.

[23]  D. Levine,et al.  Delayed psychosis after right temporoparietal stroke or trauma , 1982, Neurology.

[24]  A. Hofman,et al.  Presenile dementia and cerebral haemorrhage linked to a mutation at codon 692 of the β–amyloid precursor protein gene , 1992, Nature Genetics.

[25]  H. Vinters,et al.  Cerebral hemorrhage with biopsy-proved amyloid angiopathy. , 1992, Archives of neurology.

[26]  L. Resch,et al.  Cerebral amyloid angiopathy presenting as a mass lesion. , 1987, Stroke.

[27]  L. Caplan Stroke: A Clinical Approach , 1986 .

[28]  R. Campbell,et al.  Clinicopathologic studies of primary cerebral amyloid angiopathy. , 1979, Mayo Clinic proceedings.