Abstract

Free amino acid levels were measured in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from demented patients (D n = 30) suffering from presenile and senile dementia of Alzheimer type (PDAT, n = 7; SDAT, n = 9), multi-infarct dementia (MID, n = 14) and a reference sample group consisting of young neurotic patients (R, n = 16). Comparing the amino acid levels in the dementia subgroups, significantly higher alanine, methionine, phenylalanine and tyrosine levels were found both in MID and SDAT vs. PDAT. No difference was seen between SDAT and MID. Compared to the reference sample group, higher glycine levels were found in each dementia subgroup; higher alanine, methionine and ornithine levels in MID, and SDAT; and higher phenylalanine levels in MID. In PDAT the level of tyrosine was lower. Coefficients of correlation were calculated between amino acid levels and age, and the findings in the reference sample groups were divergent from those observed in dementia. The differences observed are discussed in terms of amino acid, carbohydrate and neurotransmitter metabolism.

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