Publications by authors named "Elzbieta Pasennik"

Ultrastructural changes in skeletal muscle biopsy in a 24-year-old female patient with clinically suspected mitochondrial encephalomyopathy lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) syndrome are presented. We observed proliferation and/or pleomorphism of mitochondria in skeletal muscle and smooth muscle cells of arterioles, as well as in pericytes of capillaries. Paracrystalline inclusions were found only in damaged mitochondria of skeletal muscle.

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Maternal ethanol consumption during pregnancy may cause foetal alcohol syndrome (FAS). Our experiments of ethanol-treated female rats were based on the FAS model in humans; therefore, the results obtained may help explain the clinical mechanism of the disease development. The ultrastructural examination of the cerebellar cortex of ten-day-old rat pups of ethanol-treated dams during pregnancy (group IA), pregnancy and lactation (group IIA), and lactation (group IIIA) revealed that alcohol administration leads to a delayed maturation of Purkinje cells.

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Granular osmiophilic material (GOM) is a pathognomonic feature of CADASIL that may be a consequence of pathological processes triggered by Notch3 mutations. Since knowledge of the effects of CADASIL-associated GOM deposits is important to understand the molecular pathogenesis of this disorder, we performed a thorough ultrastructural analysis of GOM morphology in the skin and muscle arterioles in CADASIL patients. Electron microscopy revealed numerous GOM deposits with different morphology including size, shape and osmiophilic density.

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The study was aimed at investigating the morphology of capillaries in four skin and muscle biopsy specimens obtained from CADASIL patients. In all cases diagnosis confirmed at the ultrastructural level, and additionally in three cases, the genetic test revealed the Notch3 gene mutations. Using histological and immunohistochemical (IHC) markers for components of capillary vessel wall we showed the reduction and loss of pericytes and and fibrous vessel wall including the thickened basement membrane.

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The prevalence of cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) and its association with intellectual decline in idiopathic Parkinson's disease (iPD) remain unclear. To identify the role of CAA in iPD dementia the prevalence and severity of CAA were investigated, with particular respect to changes in vessel wall structure. Twenty-eight autopsy Parkinsonian brains and fourteen age-matched controls, post-mortem revised histopathologically for the presence of alpha-synuclein and Alzheimer's disease (AD)-type pathology, using standardized clinico-neuropathological criteria, underwent further investigation.

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This report presents a case of widespread intramedullary giant cell ependymoma arising from the central canal of the C4 segment of the spinal cord in a 28-year-old man admitted to hospital with tetraplegia and signs of increased intracranial pressure, eight months after surgical spinal cervical decompression without tetraplegia improvement. Magnetic resonance imaging and autopsy revealed a tumour extending from segment C3/C4 of the spinal cord to the lower half of the fourth ventricle with coexisting syringomyelia. This slow-growing ependymoma of low-grade malignancy exhibited unusual morphology as well as degenerative and ischaemic changes.

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Ultrastructural analysis of the skeletal muscle in adult-onset Pompe disease revealed lysosomal and cytoplasmic glycogen storage, autophagic vacuoles and abnormal mitochondria. Significant glycogen accumulation within lysosomes causes their rupture and release of glycogen into the cytoplasm. Excess cytoplasmic glycogen could lead to damage of the structure of muscle cells including myofibrils.

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Three patients (of two unrelated Polish families) with early-adult onset dementia were subjects of the study. Two cases, previously diagnosed as familial Alzheimer's disease (FAD) with cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA), were confirmed by genetic and neuropathological studies, and one case of CADASIL was ultrastructurally confirmed by the presence of vascular granular osmiophilic material. Now the brain autopsy material has been reinvestigated using immunohistochemical (IHC) markers for vascular smooth muscle cells, paying special attention to collagen markers for extracellular matrix components and ultrastructural microvascular changes.

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Glycogen storage disease type II (GSD II) is an autosomal recessive deficiency of acidalpha-1,4-glucosidase(GAA) caused by mutations in the GAA gene located on human chromosome 17 (17q 25.2-q 25.3).

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CADASIL (cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leucoencephalopathy) is an inherited systemic vascular disorder affecting mainly the central nervous system. We performed detailed ultrastructural examination of the small vessels in the skin and skeletal muscle of a 51-year-old patient with bilateral cerebral white matter lesions, who had a history of two ischaemic strokes. The arterioles were characterized by degeneration and loss of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs).

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A study of microglial activation and its contribution to the CNS immune response was performed on the brain autopsy material of 40 patients with definite sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD). Spatial patterns of microglial activation and prion protein disease-associated (PrPd) deposition were compared in cerebellar and cerebral cortices using immunohistochemical (IHC) activation markers. Morphological phenotype forms of microglial cells in activation stages were assessed immunohistochemically (IHC).

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We report a 18-year-old female patient with livedo reticularis and neurological disturbances. CT scan showed two big ischemic focuses in the pons, moreover MRI revealed small disseminated ischemic focuses in the pons and deep structures of both brain hemispheres. MRA demonstrated no changes in the big extracranial and intracranial arteries.

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We retrospectively analyzed a case of a 7-month-old infant with a delay of psychomotor development, slow pupillary light reflexes, horizontal nystagmus, spasticity and bilateral optic nerve atrophy. At the end of life there were problems with swallowing. Ventriculography showed widening of the lateral ventricles and atrophy in the frontal lobes.

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Under pathological conditions, microglial cells undergo activation, which is manifested by the expression of histocompatibility locus antigens class II (HLA II) on their surface as well as by proliferation and varied morphological forms. In schizophrenia, characterised by an essential role played by immunological mechanisms, quantitative analysis of activated microglia -- with well-developed ramification (RM), degenerative traits and damaged processes (from their shortening to their complete lack) (DM) -- may contribute to better understanding of schizophrenia etiopathogenesis. Quantitative analysis was performed on slices derived from the frontal and temporal lobes of 9 brains of schizophrenics and 6 control brains.

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Schizophrenia is a social disease that occurs in 0.5-1% of the population. It shows a high variability in both clinical picture and theory of its pathogenesis.

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Activated forms of microglia were ultrastructurally evaluated in three neurological diseases of different aetiology (subacute sclerosing panencephalitis--SSPE, Wilson's disease and Alzheimer's disease). The occurrence of activated rod, ramified and amoeboid microglia was found in the investigated diseases. The widest ultrastructural variability of microglia was in SSPE, including the presence of mitotic chromosomes or centrioles in its cytoplasm, which indicates microglia proliferation.

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Alcohol ingestion by female rats during pregnancy and/or lactation leads to developmental anomalies of different organ systems, retardation and immune system impairment in their offspring. In humans, these disorders are termed foetal alcohol syndrome (FAS), or foetal alcohol effect (FAE) if abnormalities are of lesser degree. The study materials consisted of brain, liver and spleen samples collected ten days post partum from neonatal rats born to dams treated with 12% alcohol at a dose of 6 g/kg body mass during pregnancy or during pregnancy and/or lactation.

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