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Guideline [Dementia with Lewy Bodies and its differentiation from Alzheimer's disease] 2007
Ransmayr G, Katzenschlager R, Dal-Bianco P, Wenning G, Bancher C, Jellinger K, Schmidt R, Poewe W. · Neurologische Universitätsklinik Graz, Medizinische Universität Graz. · Neuropsychiatr. · Pubmed #17640492 No free full text.
Abstract: Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB) accounts for approximately 20 % of all autopsy-confirmed dementias in the elderly. Presumably, DLB is underdiagnosed in patients without or with only mild Parkinsonian symptoms in the daily routine of memory clinics. This motivated the Austrian Alzheimer Society and the Austrian Parkinson Society to inform about core features, suggestive features and supportive clinical findings of DLB and to provide information on diagnostic possibilities leading to better differential diagnosis. We also guide in the management of DLB as pharmacological treatment can pose difficult dilemmas for the treating clinician.
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Article A novel LRRK2 mutation in an Austrian cohort of patients with Parkinson's disease. 2007
Haubenberger D, Bonelli S, Hotzy C, Leitner P, Lichtner P, Samal D, Katzenschlager R, Djamshidian A, Brücke T, Steffelbauer M, Bancher C, Grossmann J, Ransmayr G, Strom TM, Meitinger T, Gasser T, Auff E, Zimprich A. · Department of Neurology, Medical University of Vienna, and SMZ-Ost Donauspital, Vienna, Austria. · Mov Disord. · Pubmed #17523199 No free full text.
Abstract: To investigate the frequency of mutations in the Leucine-Rich Repeat Kinase 2 gene (LRRK2) in a sample of Austrian Parkinson's disease (PD) patients, we sequenced the complete coding region in 16 patients with autosomal dominant PD. Furthermore, we sequenced exons 31, 35, and 41 additionally in 146 patients with idiopathic PD and 30 patients with dementia with Lewy bodies. Furthermore, all 192 patients were screened for 21 putative LRRK2 mutations. While the most common mutation G2019S and the risk variant G2385R were not found in our samples, we detected a novel missense mutation (S973N) in a patient with familial, late-onset and dopa-responsive PD.
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Article Immunoreactivities of amyloid beta peptide((1-42)) and total tau protein in lumbar cerebrospinal fluid of patients with normal pressure hydrocephalus. 2004
Lins H, Wichart I, Bancher C, Wallesch CW, Jellinger KA, Rösler N. · Department of Neurology, Otto-von-Guericke-University, Magdeburg, Germany. · J Neural Transm. · Pubmed #14991454 No free full text.
Abstract: Immunoreactivities of amyloid beta peptide((1-42)) (Abeta42-IR) and total tau protein (TTIR) were measured in lumbar cerebrospinal fluid of 48 patients (12 patients in each group) with normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH), vascular dementia (VD), Alzheimer's disease (AD), Parkinson's disease without dementia (PD) and 24 controls (CON) using sensitive and specific enzyme immunoassays. TTIR in NPH was not significantly changed compared with VD, PD and CON, while NPH-Abeta42-IR was significantly decreased compared with PD and CON. In AD, significant increases of TTIR and significant decreases of Abeta42-IR were found. Using a TTIR by Abeta42 plot, all NPH, PD, and CON samples were within the non-AD plot region. 92% of AD and VD samples were within the AD and non-AD area, respectively. We conclude that combined measurement of Abeta42-IR and TTIR contributes to the differential diagnosis of NPH vs. AD and of AD vs. VD, respectively.
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Article [Frontal lobe dementia. Clinical-pathologic case reports] 1999
Zachhuber C, Leblhuber F, Bancher C, Jellinger K, Drlicek M. · Abteilung für Neurologisch-Psychiatrische Gerontologie, Landesnervenklinik Wagner-Jauregg, Linz. · Fortschr Neurol Psychiatr. · Pubmed #10093779 No free full text.
Abstract: Frontal lobe dementia (FLD) is characterised clinically by personality changes and a progressive speech disorder finally leading to mutism. In the course of the disease also other neurological syndromes may occur such as parkinsonism, a partial Klüver-Bucy-syndrome or a degeneration of motoneurons (FLD + MND). The latter leads to death within about three years. The clinical diagnosis of FLD is supported by functional (SPECT) and morphological (CT, MRI) investigations. From 1988 to 1997, 9 cases of FLD (6 female, 3 male) were clinically diagnosed at our department of Gerontology, LNK Linz. In two of these cases the clinical diagnosis was confirmed histopathologically. Characteristically, all except one patients showed a presenile beginning of the disease. The clinical course was slowly progressive with a mean duration of about 10 years. Special attention was given to additional signs and symptoms of motor neuron disease, parkinsonism and hyperorality. Six patients suffered from FLD + MND; parkinsonism (rigid-akinetic type) and a partial Klüver-Bucy-syndrome were diagnosed in 5 cases each. In histopathological investigations the incidence of FLD seems to increase. This type of dementia should be considered as an important diagnosis differential of presenile dementia-syndromes.
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