The clinical and pathologic findings in 20 patients with hypertensive encephalopathy were reviewed. The dominant central nervous system (CNS) symptoms were altered state of consciousness and severe headache. Nausea, vomiting, and visual disturbances were less common. Seizures and focal signs were infrequent. The changes seen were invariably accompanied both by the characteristic ophthalmoscopic alterations of malignant hypertension and by uremia. The neuropathologic changes consisted of severe vascular alterations (fibrinoid necrosis of arterioles, thrombosis of arterioles and capillaries), and of parenchymal lesions (microinfarcts, petechial hemorrhages) secondary to the vascular lesions. The vascular changes were not confined to the brain but were diffuse, affecting the eyes, kidneys, and other organs. In the CNS the brainstem was most severely affected. Cerebral edema was not observed, even in those patients who had increased cerebrospinal fluid pressure and papilledema.
We have produced severe vitamin B12 deficiency in rhesus monkeys by feeding them a defined experimental diet under controlled conditions. Five years after institution of the deficient diet, the morphology and counts of peripheral blood and bone marrow are normal. Gross visual impairment appeared in five of the monkeys between 33 and 45 months after the institution of the vitamin B12 deficient diet. Subsequently, in three of the visually impaired animals, a gradually progressive spastic paralysis of their hind limbs developed. Autopsies of six deficient animals showed degeneration of the peripheral visual pathway in all and of white matter in the spinal cord in four. Degeneration of several cranial nerve roots was found in four monkeys and a mild diffuse degeneration of cerebral white matter in four. The lesions in all affected parts of the central nervous system were bilaterally symmetrical and were indistinguishable from those due to B12 deficiency in the human. No abnormalities were found in one B12 supplemented control animal.
Prolonged deprivation of vitamin B12 in rhesus monkeys produced changes in the central nervous system that were indistinguishable topographically and histologically from those of human subacute combined degeneration. Ultrastructural studies of early lesions of the spinal cord disclosed a degeneration of myelin characterized by separation of myelin lamellae and formation of intramyelinic vacuoles, leading eventually to complete destruction of myelin sheaths. At a later stage, there was degeneration and loss of axons, and marked gliosis. The theories of pathogenesis of subacute combined degeneration are reviewed in the light of these observations.
The clinical findings and pathological changes of the visual pathway of vitamin B12 deficient monkeys have been described. The cellular morphology and counts of the peripheral blood and bone marrow remained normal during the study (nine deficient, three controls: one still alive in each group). Visual impairment was noted in all seven of the deficient animals that were evaluated by clinical observations. Ophthalmoscopic examination disclosed optic atrophy in six of the seven deficient monkeys. Degeneration of the visual pathway was demonstrated by pathological examination in eight of the deficient group of nine (one is still alive). Loss of ganglion cells was noted in the maculae of two of three deficient animals with completed studies.
In the three control animals there were neither visual disturbances nor ophthalmoscopic changes and in two animals autopsies disclosed no lesions in the visual pathways. The third animal is still alive and well.
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