To identify neuropsychiatric and somatic factors related to survival in early-onset Alzheimer's disease, we longitudinally studied 108 patients (35 male, 73 female) with early-onset Alzheimer's disease who were 46 to 64 years old at onset and 50 to 69 years old when diagnosed at our institution. A five-year follow-up, 30 patients had died. Pneumonia was the most common cause (73%), followed by malignancy (20%) and heart disease (7%). Kaplan-Meier survival curves showed a lower survival rate in patients with early-onset Alzheimer's disease than in age- and sex-matched life-table data in Japan. In Cox proportional hazards analysis, male gender, early disease onset, concurrent physical illness at time of diagnosis, and a low mini-mental state examination score increased the likelihood of death in patients with early-onset Alzheimer's disease. Our study confirmed that these patients have considerable excess mortality and a different pattern of cause of death than in the general population. Gender, age at onset, physical illness, and cognitive function strongly influenced survival. These factors may be predictors of mortality in patients with early-onset Alzheimer's disease that are useful in counseling patients and their families.
A 53-year-old woman who developed depression as the first symptom of multiple system atrophy was treated. Depression was followed successively by autonomic failure, parkinsonism and cerebellar ataxia. Treatment with l-DOPA, L-threo-DOPS, and thyroid releasing hormone was associated with improvement of autonomic failure and parkinsonism. As for depression, scores on the Zung scale and the Hamilton scale improved from 58 to 49 and from 30 to 22, respectively. This case is remarkable in that depression preceded neurologic dysfunction and was managed successfully by antiparkinsonian medication. A common underlying disturbance may be responsible for the depression and neurologic dysfunction in multiple system atrophy.
In the present study we investigated whether continuous intraventricular nerve growth factor (NGF) infusion could ameliorate hippocampal cholinergic deficits and learning impairment following entorhinal cortex lesions. Rats with such lesions received continuous intraventricular infusions of NGF or vehicle. Unlesioned rats with a sham operation were studied as controls. After learning sessions, a dialysis probe was implanted in the CA3 hippocampal region. In addition, brain sections were stained for synaptophysin immunoreactivity. In rats undergoing surgical procedures similar to those in the behavioral study, brains were processed for acetylcholinesterase (AChE) histochemistry. NGF-treated rats showed partial amelioration of lesion-associated hippocampal acetylcholine (ACh) efflux deficits and fixed-interval schedule learning impairment compared with vehicle-treated rats. Histochemical, immunohistologic, and microdensitometric analyses confirmed greater density of AChE-positive fibers and synaptophysin immunoreactivity in CA3, in NGF-treated rats relative to vehicle-treated rats, although not as great as in sham-operation rats, indicating partial recovery in NGF-treated rats. These results suggest that enhanced performance of the learning task with NGF treatment was related to improved hippocampal cholinergic function: specifically, increased cholinergic neurotransmission resulting from NGF effects on cholinergic neurons and presynaptic terminals.
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