Diagnostic utility of quantitating neurofilament-immunoreactive Alzheimer's disease lesionsSM de la Monte and JR Wands MGH Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, Department of Pathology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston. The diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease (AD) neurodegeneration is based on histopathological detection of paired helical filament-associated lesions. Silver stains are routinely used but the results are fraught with intra- and interinstitutional variability. This study employed monoclonal antibodies to middle and high molecular weight neurofilament subunits in an immunohistochemical assay to assess the extent of paired helical filament-associated lesions in brains with AD, Down's syndrome plus AD lesions (AD+DN), Parkinson's disease dementia (PD), AD+PD, and normal aging changes. The densities of neurofilament-immunoreactive (NFI) cortical neurofibrillary tangles and plaques were significantly higher in AD and AD+DN than in PD and aged control brains (p < 0.001), and NFI neurofibrillary tangles and plaques were more abundant in AD and AD+DN compared with AD+PD and PD, yet all patients with AD, AD+PD, or PD died with end-stage dementia. In contrast, the densities of NFI dystrophic neurites (primarily dendrites) in cortical Layer 2 were similar among the AD, AD+DN, AD+PD, and PD groups, and all were significantly higher than control (p < 0.005). Stepwise multivariate regression analysis demonstrated significant correlations between AD diagnosis and high densities of NFI neurofibrillary tangles and plaques (p < 0.001) and between end-stage AD-type dementia and high densities of NFI dystrophic neurites (p < 0.001). This study demonstrates that the histopathological lesions correlated with AD dementia can be readily detected and quantified by immunostaining with monoclonal antibodies to phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated neurofilaments. Moreover, the findings suggest that NFI neurite pathology may be an important feature contributing to the clinically manifested AD-type dementia in individuals with Parkinson's disease.
Volume 42,
Issue 12,
pp. 1625-1634,
12/01/1994
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