In order to define the histopathological substrate of the dementia that frequently complicates the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), we analyzed the neuropathological findings in 70 autopsied adult AIDS patients, 46 of whom had suffered clinically overt dementia. Less than 10% of the brains were histologically normal. Abnormalities were found predominantly in the white matter and in subcortical structures, with relative sparing of the cortex. Their frequency and severity generally correlated well with the degree and duration of clinical dementia. Most commonly noted was diffuse pallor in the white matter, which in the pathologically milder cases was accompanied by scanty perivascular infiltrates of lymphocytes and brown-pigmented macrophages, and in the most advanced cases by clusters of foamy macrophages and multinucleated cells associated with multifocal rarefaction of the white matter. However, in nearly one third of the demented cases the histopathological findings were remarkably bland in relation to the severity of clinical dysfunction. In addition, similar mild changes were noted in over one half of the nondemented patients, consistent with subclinical involvement. Vacuolar myelopathy was found in 23 patients and was generally more common and severe in patients with advanced brain pathology. Evidence of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection was noted in nearly one quarter of the brains and was associated with a relative abundance of microglial nodules, but correlated neither with the major subcortical neuropathology nor with the clinical dementia, indicating that CMV infection likely represented a second, superimposed process. This study establishes the AIDS dementia complex as a distinct clinical and pathological entity and, together with accumulating virological evidence, suggests that it is caused by direct LAV/HTLV-III brain infection.
We reviewed the clinical, neuroradiological, and serological findings in 27 patients with cerebral toxoplasmosis complicating the acquired immune deficiency syndrome, 19 of whom were also analyzed neuropathologically. The clinical manifestations of this disorder varied, ranging from headache and fever to coma. However, the characteristic presentation included focal neurological symptoms and signs, usually of subacute onset. In addition, two-thirds of the patients exhibited more generalized cerebral dysfunction with confusion and lethargy. The computed tomographic (CT) scan most commonly revealed ring contrast enhancement, which appeared to correlate best with the histological presence of vascular proliferation and inflammation surrounding the abscesses. However, in 5 patients the CT scan revealed either homogeneous enhancement or no enhancement, and in 3 patients the scans were negative. In general, CT scans underrepresented the number of lesions eventually documented pathologically. Double-dose contrast administration and preliminary experience with magnetic resonance imaging suggested that these techniques were superior to standard CT scanning in detecting Toxoplasma lesions. All patients were seropositive for IgG antibody against Toxoplasma gondii in blood, both before the onset of illness and at the time of presentation, although titers in some patients were as low as 1:8 and most patients did not exhibit rising titers. Prompt therapy resulted in rapid clinical improvement, documented by CT scan, associated with the development of an organizing tissue response in the host and elimination of free organisms. Response to treatment was sufficiently rapid in most patients to allow a trial of therapy as the favored approach to diagnosis.
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