PMID: 11327296May 1, 2001Paper

Ubiquitinated neuronal inclusions in the neostriatum in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis with and without dementia--a study of 60 patients 31 to 87 years of age

Clinical Neuropathology
K WakabayashiH Takahashi

Abstract

Neuronal degeneration in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is associated with ubiquitinated cytoskeletal alterations in the motor neuron system. Ubiquitin-positive inclusions are also seen in the limbic system in ALS with dementia (ALS-D). Recently, similar inclusions were reported to occur in the neostriatum in a case of ALS-D. We, therefore, immunohistochemically examined the neostriatum from 60 patients with ALS and 60 control subjects. Two forms of ubiquitin-positive inclusions were found in the ALS neostriatum: rod-like inclusions in the large neurons and crescent-shaped inclusions in the small neurons. The former were found in 14 ALS and 18 control subjects, whereas the latter were specific to ALS; the crescent-shaped inclusions in small neurons were found in 27 ALS patients, and the immunohistochemical and ultrastructural features were identical to those of the extra-motor inclusions of ALS. Moreover, characteristic temporal lesions consistent with those seen in ALS-D were found in 8 patients, of whom 2 had shown dementia. The present findings strongly suggest that neostriatal small neurons are also involved in the disease process in ALS.

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