Inagaki T, Ishino H, Senoh H, Yamamori C, Iijima M, Ideshita H, Hikiji A
Department of Psychiatry, Shimane Medical University, Izumo, Japan.
No To Shinkei. 1990 Mar;42(3):291-6.
A case of Binswanger disease with numerous diffuse plaques in the neocortex was reported. This male patient had a previous history of hypertension and myocardial infarction. From the age of 60, he developed dysarthria, bradykinesia, marche à petit pas and falling down. Neurological examination at his first admission disclosed muscular rigidity and increased jaw and deep tendon reflexes, but dementia was not found. Brain CT showed moderate brain atrophy and EEG consisted of slow wave dysrhythmia. He was diagnosed of Parkinsonism and treatment started without effects. During his second admission for the treatment of myocardial infarction, at the age of 64, delirium developed. Progressive dementia began and finally he was confined to bed. From the age of 69, spontaneous speech became almost lost. Contracture of the extremities, increased deep tendon reflexes and force grasping were noted. Brain CT showed symmetrical low attenuation in the frontal and parietal white matter with moderate dilatation of the lateral ventricles. At the age of 70, he died of general prostration about ten years after the initial symptoms. Neuropathological findings: Macroscopic findings: The brain weighed 1300 g. Atherosclerotic changes of the large arteries at the base of the brain were moderate. Coronal sections of the brain showed moderate enlargement of the lateral ventricles with multiple small lacunes in the basal ganglia. Microscopic findings: Bilateral diffuse demyelination of the white matter with sparing of the U-fibers was noted. Holzer stain revealed fibrillary gliosis in the left parietal and occipital white matter. Marked adventitial fibrosis of the deep white matter arteries and terminal stages of hyalinosis of the perforating arteries were found. Basal ganglia showed status lacunaris. Bilateral pyramidal tracts were atrophic secondly.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)