Laminar spongiosis of the dentate gyrus: a sign of disconnection, present in cases of severe Alzheimer’s disease

Springer Science and Business Media LLC - Tập 95 - Trang 413-420 - 1998
C. Duyckaerts1, Marie-Anne Colle1, Danielle Seilhean1, Jean-Jacques Hauw1
1Laboratoire de Neuropathologie R. Escourolle, INSERM U 106, Hôpital de La Salpêtrière, 47, Boulevard de l’Hôpital, F-75651 Paris Cedex 13, France, , FR

Tóm tắt

An extensive laminar spongiosis was found in the outer part of the dentate gyrus in an 84-year-old patient. An old cavitary infarct in the parahippocampal gyrus disconnected the dentate gyrus from the entorhinal area. This finding prompted us to seek laminar spongiosis in Alzheimer’s disease, where the neuronal loss in the entorhinal cortex might be severe. The dentate gyrus was systematically examined in a series of prospectively assessed cases either intellectually normal or affected by mental impairment of graded severity. Laminar spongiosis was present in the most severely affected patients. The neuritic crown of the senile plaques seen in the laminar band of spongiosis contained only a few tau- and Bodian-positive fibers, a sign that was taken as evidence of “plaque denervation”. By contrast, deposits of Aβ peptide remained abundant but lacked a dense core. These data suggest that dendritic and axonal processes are intermingled in the senile plaque and that the amyloid core is at least partially dependent on the presence of the axonal component.