Abstract
This report concerns an autopsy case of rapidly progressive aphasia and motor neuron disease. The patient was a Japanese woman who was 75 years old at the time of death. The family history did not reveal hereditary burden. She developed language disturbances and difficulty in swallowing at age 74. Neurological examination 1 month after the disease onset revealed motor aphasia without dementia and bulbar sign, followed by muscle weakness of the four extremities. Neuroradiological examination revealed progressive atrophy of the anterior part of the left temporal lobe. She died of respiratory difficulty 10 months after the disease onset. Macroscopically, neuropathological examination showed circumscribed atrophy of the left perisylvian region and, histologically, neuronal loss in the cerebral cortex, including the primary motor area, substantia nigra, brain stem motor nuclei, and anterior horns of the spinal cord, in addition to obvious degeneration of the pyramidal tracts and presence of Bunina bodies. Ubiquitin-immunoreactive neuronal inclusions were present in the hippocampal dentate granular cells and frontotemporal cortical layer II neurons. Based on these clinicopathological findings and a review of the literature, we concluded that our case is the first reported case of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis with dementia that clinically showed rapidly progressive aphasia.
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Received: 1 March 1999 / Revised, accepted: 11 May 1999
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Tsuchiya, K., Ozawa, E., Fukushima, J. et al. Rapidly progressive aphasia and motor neuron disease: a clinical, radiological, and pathological study of an autopsy case with circumscribed lobar atrophy. Acta Neuropathol 99, 81–87 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1007/PL00007411
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/PL00007411