1 results match your criteria: "University of Western Ontario and Children's Psychiatric Research Institute[Affiliation]"

Neuropathologic examination of six brains from children with Hurler disease revealed nodular lesions in the glomus of choroid plexus caused by proliferation of vacuolated pericytes, fibroblasts, and arachnoid cells on the background of collagenized and myxoid stroma. This localization of lesions can be explained by the presence of a rich vascular network, as well as cellular heterogeneity greater in the glomus than in other parts of the choroid plexus or in the brain parenchyma. The development of nodules did not correlate with the age, severity of hydrocephalus, or the degree of expansion of the perivascular spaces in the brain.

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