Dementia & Neuropsychologia ()

Non-inflammatory cerebral amyloid angiopathy as a cause of rapidly progressive dementia: A case study

  • Leonel Tadao Takada,
  • Paulo Camiz,
  • Lea T. Grinberg,
  • Claudia da Costa Leite

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/s1980-57642009dn30400015
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 4
pp. 352 – 357

Abstract

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Abstract A 77 year-old men developed a subacute-onset, rapidly progressive cognitive decline. After 6 months of evolution, he scored 6 on the Mini-Mental State Examination and had left hemiparesis and hemineglect. The patient died 11 months after the onset of cognitive symptoms. Brain MRI showed microhemorrhages on gradient-echo sequence and confluent areas of white matter hyperintensities on T2-weighted images. Brain biopsy revealed amyloid-b peptide deposition in vessel walls, some of them surrounded by micro-bleeds. In this case report, we discuss the role of cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) in cognitive decline, due to structural lesions associated with hemorrhages and infarcts, white matter lesions and co-morbidity of Alzheimer's disease, as well as the most recently described amyloid angiopathy-related inflammation.

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