Rev Neurol (Paris)
December 2024
Aim: An update on the plasticity of the brain networks involved in autism (autism spectrum disorders [ASD]), and the increasing role of their synapses and primary non-motile cilia.
Methods: Data from PubMed and Google on this subject, published until February 2024, were analyzed.
Results: Structural and functional brain characteristics and genetic particularities involving synapses and cilia that modify neuronal circuits are observed in ASD, such as reduced pruning of dendrites, minicolumnar pathology, or persistence of connections usually doomed to disappear.
I'm going to explain how and why I fell into the Department of Neuropathology at the Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital of Paris. I'd also like to sketch the history of French neuropathology in the years 1960-2010, as seen by a naive young student, and then by a practicing neuropathologist (often still very naive). As a matter of fact, although the history of neurosciences [1-2] and the Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital in Paris [3-4] have been the subject of numerous publications, the history of neuropathology in this hospital has been rarely documented [5-6].
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSubacute sclerosing panencephalitis, a late complication of measles, is still present during epidemics of this disease due to insufficient vaccination. After a historical review, the importance of the diagnostic criteria and the pathophysiology of SSEP are discussed. Numerous studies on the parameters of innate immunity and interferon responses tend to show a decrease in the activity of cellular immunity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE) is a rare, non-treatable and fatal neurological complication of measles, still present due to the return of the epidemic linked to the loosening of vaccination policies. Its mechanism remains unexplained.
Objective: The main objective was to investigate explanatory variables relating to the risk of developing SSPE and its pathophysiology.
Jean-Martin Charcot described what he called amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in his 12 and 13 lessons published in 1873 by Bourneville. He distinguished the symptoms that were related to the lesion of the anterior horn of the spinal cord and those that were due to the degeneration (that he named "sclerosis") of its lateral column. He thought that "inflammation" progressed from the lateral column to the anterior horn (but the term inflammation is not to be taken in the current meaning): the lesion of the anterior horn was thus "deuteropathic".
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims: In the search for blood-based biomarkers of neurodegenerative diseases, we characterized the concentration of total prion protein (t-PrP) in the plasma of neurodegenerative dementias. We aimed to assess its accuracy in this differential diagnostic context.
Methods: Plasma t-PrP was measured in 520 individuals including healthy controls (HC) and patients diagnosed with neurological disease control (ND), Alzheimer's disease (AD), sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD), frontotemporal dementia (FTD), Lewy body dementia (LBD) and vascular dementia (VaD).
Background: Risk factors for intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) include hypertension and cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA). The objective of this study was to determine the autopsy prevalence of CAA and the potential overlap with other risk factors among patients who died from ICH and also the correlation of CAA with cerebral microbleeds.
Methods: We analyzed 81 consecutive autopsy brains from patients with ICH.
Diagnostic criteria of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), a rare and fatal transmissible nervous system disease with public health implications, are determined by clinical data, electroencephalogram (EEG), detection of 14-3-3 protein in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), brain magnetic resonance imaging and prion protein gene examination. The specificity of protein 14-3-3 has been questioned. We reviewed data from 1,572 autopsied patients collected over an 18-year period (1992-2009) and assessed whether and how 14-3-3 detection impacted the diagnosis of sporadic CJD in France, and whether this led to the misdiagnosis of treatable disorders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough several ADAMs (A disintegrin-like and metalloproteases) have been shown to contribute to the amyloid precursor protein (APP) metabolism, the full spectrum of metalloproteases involved in this metabolism remains to be established. Transcriptomic analyses centred on metalloprotease genes unraveled a 50% decrease in ADAM30 expression that inversely correlates with amyloid load in Alzheimer's disease brains. Accordingly, in vitro down- or up-regulation of ADAM30 expression triggered an increase/decrease in Aβ peptides levels whereas expression of a biologically inactive ADAM30 (ADAM30(mut)) did not affect Aβ secretion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProtein misfolding and spreading ("transconformation") are being better understood. Described in Prions diseases, this new paradigm in the field of neurodegenerative disorders and brain aging also implies sporadic inclusion myositis, type 2 diabetes, some cancers, sickle cell disease..
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Purpose: Intracranial artery dolichoectasia (IADE) and coronary artery ectasia have been associated with stroke and myocardial infarction, respectively. Only rarely have cases of coexisting IADE and coronary artery ectasia been reported. We investigated this association in a large consecutive autopsy series.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSince J. Cuillé and P. L.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDoctor Françoise Cathala Pagesy, MD, MS, born on July 7, 1921 in Paris, passed away peacefully at home on November 5, 2012. Unconventional, passionate and enthusiastic neurologist and virologist, she devoted her life to research on latent and slow viral infections, specializing mainly on unconventional transmissible agents or prions. As a research member of Inserm (French Institute for Medical Research), she soon joined the team of Carlton Gajdusek (the NINCDS - National Institute of Nervous Central System and Stroke - of NIH), who first demonstrated the transmissibility of kuru and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease to monkeys.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBull Acad Natl Med
November 2012
Intracellular inclusions seen by the pathologist may have variable significance. Although they are excellent markers of proteolytic disorders, they can also be due to several other mechanisms. This article examines recent data on the morphology, significance and consequences of aging lipofuscins in the brain and retina, neurofibrillary tangles and Lewy bodies, and Birbeck granules associated with Langerhans histiocytosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn prion diseases, a major issue in therapeutic research is the variability of the effect between strains. Stimulated by the report of an antiprion effect in a scrapie model and by ongoing international clinical trials using doxycycline, we studied the efficacy of cyclines against the propagation of human prions. First, we successfully propagated various Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) isolates (sporadic, variant, and iatrogenic CJD) in neuronal cultures expressing the human prion protein.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims: Although demyelination is an important cause of neurological deficits in multiple sclerosis (MS), recently axonal pathology and concomitant involvement of sodium channels (Nav) became a focus of major interest. Studies in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) and MS have shown diffuse expression of Nav1.6 and Nav1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified a region upstream the BIN1 gene as the most important genetic susceptibility locus in Alzheimer's disease (AD) after APOE. We report that BIN1 transcript levels were increased in AD brains and identified a novel 3 bp insertion allele ∼28 kb upstream of BIN1, which increased (i) transcriptional activity in vitro, (ii) BIN1 expression levels in human brain and (iii) AD risk in three independent case-control cohorts (Meta-analysed Odds ratio of 1.20 (1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHuman prion diseases are a heterogeneous group of fatal neurodegenerative disorders, characterized by the deposition of the partially protease-resistant prion protein (PrP(res)), astrocytosis, neuronal loss and spongiform change in the brain. Among inherited forms that represent 15% of patients, different phenotypes have been described depending on the variations detected at different positions within the prion protein gene. Here, we report a new mechanism governing the phenotypic variability of inherited prion diseases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBull Acad Natl Med
October 2011
The current classification of human sporadic prion diseases recognizes six major phenotypic subtypes with distinctive clinicopathological features, which largely correlate at the molecular level with the genotype at the polymorphic codon 129 (methionine, M, or valine, V) in the prion protein gene and with the size of the protease-resistant core of the abnormal prion protein, PrP(Sc) (i.e. type 1 migrating at 21 kDa and type 2 at 19 kDa).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe objective was to characterize a rapidly progressive subtype of Alzheimer's disease (rpAD). Multicenter (France, Germany, Japan, Spain) retrospective analyses of neuropathologically confirmed rpAD cases initially classified as prion disease due to their clinical phenotype were performed. Genetic properties, cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers, neuropathology, and clinical features were examined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCerebral aspergillosis is a rare pathology of poor prognosis in spite of the use of adapted antifungal treatments. This infection of the central nervous system is generally the complication of an invasive aspergillosis with hematogenic scattering from pulmonary focal spots. It can arise in immunocompetent patients treated with prolonged corticotherapy or chemoradiotherapy for cancer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSixty cases of frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) were collected over 22 years. Brain weight was negatively correlated with disease duration. The neuronal and/or glial inclusions were labeled by anti-TDP, anti-FUS or anti-TAU antibodies, respectively, in 40, 3 and 12 cases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF