We report a 80-year-old woman who suffered from primary progressive aphasia for 3 years. Cranial CT and MRI studies showed moderate cerebral atrophy, more marked in the left frontal and temporal lobes, and SPECT brain scans revealed marked hypometabolism in the left frontal and temporal lobes. Neuropathologic examination of a temporal lobe biopsy demonstrated Gallyas-positive intracytoplasmic inclusions looking like fibrillary tangles and of Gallyas-positive cell processes, probably from glial cells. Glial intracytoplasmic inclusions were immunolabelled with antibodies to ubiquitin and with phosphorylion-dependent antitau antibodies, indicating the presence of hyperphosphorylated tau in the inclusions. There was only mild pathology of cortical neurons consisting in rare perikarya diffusely stained with antitau antibodies. There were no senile plaques, neurofibrillary tangles, ‘achromatic’ neurons, ballooned cells, Pick or Lewy bodies, nor microvacuoles or spongiform changes of the neuropil. The glial intracytoplasmic inclusions found in this case were similar to those found in multiple system atrophy, and differ from the cortical changes hitherto reported in primary progressive aphasia.
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