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Volume 3, Issue 1, Pages 54-57 (January 2007)


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Greater frequency of subcortical lesions in severely demented patients with early onset Alzheimer’s disease

Anita Malgorzata GeppertaCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Katarzyna Anna Wroblewskab, Elzbieta Maria Przedpelska-Obera

Abstract 

Background

Recent data have shown that in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), vascular brain lesions might promote the progression of cognitive decline or might even precede neuronal damage.

Methods

Ischemic brain lesions, recognized on computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging, were analyzed retrospectively in 72 patients with early and late onset sporadic AD.

Results

All types of ischemic lesions occurred more frequently in the AD patients than in the controls. Analysis of subgroups of early and late onset AD patients diagnosed by magnetic resonance imaging showed a more frequent occurrence of subcoritcal lesions in severely demented patients with early onset AD.

Conclusions

The non-stroke subcortical ischemic lesions occurring more frequently in our AD patients might be recognized as the concomitant vascular pathology that characterizes severely demented patients with early onset sporadic AD.

a Department of Neurology, University of Medical Sciences, Poznan, Poland

b Department of Radiology, University of Medical Sciences, Poznan, Poland

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: 48-61-8691530; Fax: 48-61-8691697.

PII: S1552-5260(06)04860-6

doi:10.1016/j.jalz.2006.10.007


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