Neurodegeneration Flashcards

1
Q

What is the neuropathology of AD?

A

Extracellular plaques: accumulation of protein in brain parenchyma

Neurofibrillary tangles: disruption of neuronal cytoskeleton

Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA)

Neuronal loss (cerebral atrophy)

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2
Q

What can be seen here? What are these?

A

Senile plaques: lumps of protein in brain

Tangles

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3
Q

What is this? Where else can this protein be found?

A

Cerebral amyloid angiopathy

Can be found in blood vessel walls in varying extents in different cases

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4
Q

What can be seen here?

A

Tau immunostaining

Cytoskeleton protein, abnormal Tau is stained brown by antibody

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5
Q

Which drug for Alzheimer’s has not yet been approved?

A

Aducanumab

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6
Q

What is this?

A

Locus classicus

Low pigmented substantia nigra in Parkinson’s

Due to loss of dopaminergic neurones which contain neuromelanin pigment

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7
Q

What is this?

A

Lewy Body

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8
Q

What is this?

A

Lewy Body

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9
Q

What is this?

A

Lewy Body

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10
Q

What is the pathology of α-synuclein?

A

Mutations in α-synuclein gene can result in PD.

Lewy bodies + Lewy neurites are immunoreactive for α-synuclein.

α-synuclein immunostaining is diagnostic gold standard.

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11
Q

What are these?

A

α-synuclein immunostaining

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12
Q

What are these? What does this illustrate?

A

α-Syn deposits in epicardial nerve fascicles (e, f)

Paravertebral sympathetic ganglia (a, b).

Pathology not restricted to CNS- peripheral autonomic ganglia

Also found in the nose

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13
Q

What are 7 causes of Parkinsonism?

A

Idiopathic

Drug-induced Parkinsonism

Multiple system atrophy

Progressive supranuclear palsy

Corticobasal degeneration

Vascular pseudoparkinsonism

Alzheimer’s changes

Fronto-temporal neurodegenerative disorders

20 other disorders

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14
Q

What is this? How does this present? Describe the pathology

A

Multiple System Atrophy (MSA)

A/W falls, can mimic parkinsons

Alpha synucleinopathy: accumulates more in glial support cells rather than neurones

(same protein, different cellular substrate)

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15
Q

What is this? What is the pathology?

A

Corticobasal Degeneration (CBD)

Astrocytic tau plaques

(NOT alpha synucleinopathy)

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16
Q

What is this? What problems sometimes characterise this? What is the pathology?

A

Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP)

Vertical eye movement problems

Tau-opathy

(NOT alpha synucleinopathy)

17
Q

What is this?

A

Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP)

18
Q

What are features of Pick’s Disease?

A

Fronto-temporal atrophy

Marked gliosis and neuronal loss

Balloon neurons

Tau positive Pick bodies

19
Q

What is this?

A

Tau positive Pick bodies

20
Q

What is the structure of the TAU protein?

A

Single gene on 17q21

16 exons

Alternative splicing gives rise to 6 isoforms

3R or 4R-tau (microtubule-binding domains)

2 further inserts with unknown function

Shortest form (3R/0N) foetal

21
Q

How are Prion diseases transmitted?

A

Transmissible factor: transmission of protein causes disease in recipient

No DNA or RNA involved

PRoteinaceous Infections ONly

22
Q

Name 4 prion diseases seen in humans

A

Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease

Gerstmann-Straüssler-Sheinker syndrome

Kuru

Fatal familial insomnia

23
Q

Describe prion diseases

A

Proteinopathies

Prion protein deposits

Spongiform change: holes appear in tissue

Host protein structure is changed by infected protein- causes pathology

24
Q

Describe the aetiology and epidemiology of new variant CJD. Give 2 symptoms of vCJD

A

Sporadic neuropsychiatric disorder

Linked to BSE: ingestion of infected bovine material

Longer duration than CJD

<45y

Cerebellar ataxia

Dementia

25
Q

What features are present in the right hand image suggestive of Alzheimer’s disease?

A

Cortical atrophy

Thinning of cortex

Widening of sulci

Thinning of gyri

Enlargement of ventricles

26
Q

How do plaques form in Alzheimers disease?

A

Cleavage of amyloid precursor protein

Beta amyloid produced

Accumulation of beta amyloid intracellularly

Expelled beta amyloid forms plaques

27
Q

What are the likely contributors to cell death in Alzheimers disease?

A

Interruption of cellular processes involved in:

Calcium homeostasis

Mitochondria + reactive oxygen species

Proteosome blockage

Intracellular tangle formation

28
Q

What is used for the staging of Tau pathology? What is diagnosis based on?

A

Braak staging

Dx based on amount + site in brain

Nearly all >60s will show some signs of Alzheimers in the brain though not symptomatic

29
Q

Describe the spread of Tau pathology in Alzheimers disease

A
  1. Around hippocampus
  2. Posterior hippocampus
  3. Temporal cortex
  4. Occipital cortex
30
Q

Where do the neurones in the substantial nigra project to?

A

Neurones project to striatum in basal ganglia where initiation of movement is controlled

31
Q

What are Lewy bodies?

A

Eosinophilic inclusions in pigmented neurones

Composed of aggregates of the protein alpha synuclein