Progressive Neuronal Injury Associated with Amyloid Plaque Formation in Alzheimer Disease (original) (raw)
Journal Article
,
Department of Geriatrics,
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
, Little Rock, AR 72205
Department of Neurology, Rui-Jin Hospital,
Shanghai Second Medical University
, Shanghai 200025
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,
Department of Geriatrics,
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
, Little Rock, AR 72205
Department of Neurology, Rui-Jin Hospital,
Shanghai Second Medical University
, Shanghai 200025
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,
Department of Veterans'
Affairs Medical Center
Department of Pathology,
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
, Little Rock, AR 72205
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Geriatrics Research,
Education and Clinical Center
Department of Veterans'
Affairs Medical Center
Department of Geriatrics,
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
, Little Rock, AR 72205
Correspondence to: Professor W. Sue T. Griffin, Geriatric Research, Education and Clinical Center, Department of Veterans' Affairs Medical Center, 4300 West Seventh Street, Little Rock, AR 72205/
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Cite
Jin G. Sheng, Xue Q. Zhou, Robert E. Mrak, W.S.T. Griffin, Progressive Neuronal Injury Associated with Amyloid Plaque Formation in Alzheimer Disease, Journal of Neuropathology & Experimental Neurology, Volume 57, Issue 7, July 1998, Pages 714–717, https://doi.org/10.1097/00005072-199807000-00008
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Abstract
Neuronal injury associated with amyloid plaque progression in Alzheimer disease was examined using TUNEL combined with β-amyloid immunolabeling. There was a progressive increase in the frequency of TUNEL-positive neurons associated with plaque types representing a hypothesized sequence of plaque evolution, from 20% of neurons not associated with plaques to 40%, 70–80%; and 100% of neurons in diffuse, neuritic, and dense-core non-neuritic plaques, respectively. The total number of neurons associated with end-stage, dense-core, non-neuritic plaques declined by 70% (per unit plaque area) compared with neuritic plaque forms. This decline, together with the fact that virtually all of those remaining were TUNEL-positive, suggests that neuronal cell damage increases as plaques evolve from diffuse to more complex forms and that eventually all plaque-associated neurons are lost. This novel demonstration of neurotoxicity associated with amyloid plaque formation and progression suggests that plaque-associated neuronal injury is a major cause of neuronal loss in Alzheimer disease.
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© 1998 by the American Association of Neuropathologists, Inc.
Topic:
- amyloid
- alzheimer's disease
- neurotoxicity syndromes
- in situ nick-end labeling
- neurons
- senile plaques
- cell injury
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