Alzheimer disease

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Alzheimer disease

Psychological disorders

Eating disorders and impulse-control disorders

Factitious disorders

Medication-induced movement disorders and other adverse effects of medication

Somatic symptoms and related disorders

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Alzheimer disease

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USMLE® Step 1 style questions USMLE

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A pathologist is examining brain biopsies from a patient who died from a neurodegenerative condition following an episode of aspiration pneumonia. A tissue sample from the patient is demonstrated below:



Image reproduced from Wikimedia Commons

Further staining reveals patchy red plaques that become yellow when viewed under polarized light. Which of the following clinical courses was most likely seen in this patient? 

External References

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Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) inhibitors

Alzheimer disease p. 564

Alzheimer disease p. 534

amalyoidosis in p. 214

Down syndome and p. 61

drug therapy for p. 239, 564

labs/findings p. 728, 734

neurotransmitters for p. 507

ventriculomegaly with p. 536

Early-onset Alzheimer disease p. 61

Galantamine p. 239

for Alzheimer disease p. 564

Nausea

Alzheimer disease drugs p. 564

Rivastigmine p. 239

Alzheimer disease p. 564

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Dementia isn’t technically a disease, but more of a way to describe a set of symptoms like poor memory and difficulty learning new information, which can make it really hard to function independently.

Usually dementia’s caused by some sort of damage to the cells in the brain, which can be caused by a variety of diseases. Alzheimer’s disease, now referred to as Alzheimer disease, is the most common cause of dementia.

Alzheimer disease is considered a neurodegenerative disease, meaning it causes the degeneration, or loss, of neurons in the brain, particularly in the cortex. This, as you might expect, leads to the symptoms characteristic of dementia.

Although the cause of Alzheimer disease isn’t completely understood, two major players that are often cited in its progression are plaques and tangles.

Alright, so here we’ve got the cell membrane of a neuron in the brain. In the membrane, you’ve got this molecule called amyloid precursor protein, or APP, one end of this guy’s in the cell, and the other end’s outside the cell. It’s thought that this guy helps the neuron grow and repair itself after an injury.

Since APP’s a protein, just like other proteins, it gets used and over time it gets broken down and recycled.

Normally, it gets chopped up by an enzyme called alpha secretase and it’s buddy, gamma secretase.

This chopped up peptide is soluble and goes away, and everything’s all good.

If another enzyme, beta secretase, teams up with gamma secretase instead, then we’ve got a problem, and this leftover fragment isn’t soluble, and creates a monomer called amyloid beta.

These monomers tend to be chemically “sticky”, and bond together just outside the neurons, and form what are called beta-amyloid plaques—these clumps of lots of these monomers.

These plaques can potentially get between the neurons, which can get in the way of neuron-to-neuron signaling.

If the brain cells can’t signal and relay information, then brain functions like memory can be seriously impaired.

It’s also thought that these plaques can start up an immune response and cause inflammation which might damage surrounding neurons.

Amyloid plaque can also deposit around blood vessels in the brain, called amyloid angiopathy, which weakens the walls of the blood vessels and increases the risk of hemorrhage, or rupture and blood loss.

Here’s an image of amyloid plaque on histology, these clumps are buildups of beta amyloid, and this is happening outside the cell.

Another big part of alzheimer disease though, are tangles, and these are actually found inside the cell, as opposed to the beta-amyloid plaques.

Just like other cells, neurons are held together by their cytoskeleton, which is partly made up of microtubules, these track-like structures that essentially act like a minecart shipping nutrients and molecules along the length of the cell.

A special protein called tau makes sure that these tracks don’t break apart, kind of like railway ties.

Although again, it’s not completely understood, it’s thought that the beta amyloid plaque build-up outside the neuron, initiates pathways inside the neuron that leads to activation of kinase, an enzyme that transfers phosphate groups to the tau protein.

The tau protein then changes shape, stops supporting the microtubules, and clumps up with other tau proteins, and gets tangled, and leads to the other characteristic finding of Alzheimer disease–neurofibrillary tangles.

Neurons with tangles and non-functioning microtubules can’t signal as well, and sometimes end up undergoing apoptosis, or programmed cell death. Here’s an image of histology showing these neurofibrillary tangles formed inside the cell.

As neurons die, large scale changes start to take place in the brain, for one, the brain atrophies, or shrinks, and the gyri get narrower, which are the characteristic ridges of the brain.

As those get narrower, the sulci, which are the grooves between the gryi, get wider.

With atrophy, the ventricles, or fluid-filled cavities in the brain, get larger as well.

Sources

  1. "Robbins Basic Pathology" Elsevier (2017)
  2. "Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, Twentieth Edition (Vol.1 & Vol.2)" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2018)
  3. "Pathophysiology of Disease: An Introduction to Clinical Medicine 8E" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2018)
  4. "Alzheimer's disease" BMJ (2009)
  5. "Early-onset Alzheimer's Disease: Nonamnestic Subtypes and Type 2 AD" Archives of Medical Research (2012)
  6. "Pathogenic tau-induced piRNA depletion promotes neuronal death through transposable element dysregulation in neurodegenerative tauopathies" Nature Neuroscience (2018)