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  • Title: Familial Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease: three autopsy cases of the panencephalopathic type.
    Author: Seno H, Ishino H, Inagaki T, Yamamori C, Iijima M, Tanaka S, Kobayashi S, Shimizu Y, Torii I, Harada T.
    Journal: Clin Neuropathol; 1994; 13(4):185-91. PubMed ID: 7955663.
    Abstract:
    Three autopsy cases of panencephalopathic type of familial Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) were investigated. Cases 1 (51-year-old male) and 3 (54-year-old female) were siblings and Case 2 (68-year-old female) was their aunt. In cases 1 and 3, the age of onset (Case 1:51, Case 3:53), duration of illness (Case 1:9 months, Case 3:8 months) and neuropsychiatric symptoms (pyramidal and extrapyramidal tracts involvements, blindness and dementia in chronological order) were similar, but in Case 2, the onset was later (66 years old), duration was longer (32 months) and the initial symptom was dementia. Myoclonus and apallic state in the terminal stage were common to all 3 cases. Neuropathologically, all 3 cases had characteristics that indicated panencephalopathic type of CJD. Cases 1 and 3 had similar neuropathological findings with characteristic circumscribed necrotic foci in the subcortical white matter. In Case 2 in contrast, diffuse demyelination and fibrillary gliosis in the cerebral white matter were observed without circumscribed necrotic foci. In the cerebellum of Case 3, granular cell loss was very slight. The other lesions in the cerebral cortex and striatum of the 3 cases were common. In conclusion, the clinical symptoms and neuropathological findings of our familial CJD cases were different from one another.
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