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Morphological characteristics differentiate dementia with Lewy bodies from Parkinson disease with and without dementia.

Kurt A Jellinger
Published in: Journal of neural transmission (Vienna, Austria : 1996) (2023)
Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) and Parkinson disease (PD) with and without dementia are entities of a spectrum of Lewy body diseases. About 26.3% of all PD patients develop dementia increasing up to 83%. Parkinson disease-dementia (PDD) and DLB share many clinical and morphological features that separate them from non-demented PD (PDND). Clinically distinguished by the temporal sequence of motor and cognitive symptoms, the pathology of PDD and DLB includes variable combinations of Lewy body (LB) and Alzheimer (AD) lesions, both being more severe in DLB, but much less frequent and less severe in PDND. The objective of this study was to investigate the morphological differences between these three groups. 290 patients with pathologically confirmed PD were reviewed. 190 of them had clinical dementia; 110 met the neuropathological criteria of PDD and 80 of DLB. The major demographic and clinical data were obtained from medical records. Neuropathology included semiquantitative assessment of LB and AD pathologies including cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA). PDD patients were significantly older than PDND and DLB ones (83.9 vs 77.9 years, p < 0.05); the age of DLB patients was between them (80.0 years), while the disease duration was shortest in DLB. Brain weight was lowest in DLB, which showed higher Braak LB scores (mean 5.2 vs 4.2) and highest Braak tau stages (mean 5.2 vs 4.4 and 2.3, respectively). Thal Aβ phases were also highest in DLB (mean 4.1 vs 3.0 and 1.8, respectively). Major findings were frequency and degree of CAA, being highest in DLB (95% vs 50% and 24%, with scores 2.9 vs 0.7 and 0.3, respectively), whereas other small vessel lesions showed no significant differences. Striatal Aβ deposits also differentiated DLB from the other groups. This and other studies of larger cohorts of PD patients indicate that the association of CAA and cortical tau-but less-LB pathologies are associated with more severe cognitive decline and worse prognosis that distinguish DLB from PDD and PDND. The particular impact of both CAA and tau pathology supports the concept of a pathogenic continuum ranging from PDND to DLB + AD within the spectrum of age-related synucleinopathies.
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