Abstract

To evaluate the clinical and pathological features of a subgroup of patients with Alzheimer disease (AD) who exhibited early and disproportionately severe impairments on tests of frontal lobe functioning. We hypothesized that these patients would exhibit a greater degree of either neurofibrillary tangle (NFT) or senile plaque pathology in the frontal lobes than would patients with typical AD. We examined the neuropsychological profiles and senile plaque and NFT accumulation in the frontal, entorhinal, temporal, and parietal cortices in 3 patients with AD who exhibited disproportionate frontal impairments during early stages of dementia (frontal AD) and 3 matched patients with typical AD (typical AD). Compared with the typical AD group, the frontal AD group performed significantly worse on 2 tests of frontal lobe functioning and on the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Revised Block Design test. No significant group differences were found on other tests. Analysis of brain tissue samples demonstrated that, despite comparable entorhinal, temporal, and parietal NFT loads, the frontal AD group showed a significantly higher NFT load in the frontal cortex than the typical AD group. Senile plaque pathology in the frontal and entorhinal cortices did not differentiate the 2 groups. We identified a subgroup of patients with pathologically confirmed AD who presented in the early stages of dementia with disproportionate impairments on tests of frontal lobe functioning and had a greater-than-expected degree of NFT pathology in the frontal lobes, suggesting the existence of a frontal variant of AD that has distinctive clinical and pathological features.

Highlights

  • Senile plaque pathology in the frontal and entorhinal cortices did not differentiate the Design and Outcome Measures: We examined the Results: Compared with the typical Alzheimer disease (AD) group, the Conclusions: We identified a subgroup of patients with pathologically confirmed AD who presented in the early stages of dementia with disproportionate impairments on tests of frontal lobe functioning and had a greater-than-expected degree of neurofibrillary tangle (NFT) pathology in the frontal lobes, suggesting the existence of a frontal variant of AD that has distinctive clinical and pathological features

  • (AD) is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by a progressive decline in cognition that affects multiple systems, such as memory, language, executive functions, and visuospatial skills

  • Compared with the typical AD group, the frontal AD group performed significantly worse on Trail Making Test A

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Senile plaque pathology in the frontal and entorhinal cortices did not differentiate the Design and Outcome Measures: We examined the Results: Compared with the typical AD group, the Conclusions: We identified a subgroup of patients with pathologically confirmed AD who presented in the early stages of dementia with disproportionate impairments on tests of frontal lobe functioning and had a greater-than-expected degree of NFT pathology in the frontal lobes, suggesting the existence of a frontal variant of AD that has distinctive clinical and pathological features. When reviewing the neuropsychological profiles, a subset of 3 patients with disproportionately severe impairments on 2 tests of frontal lobe function (ie, Trail Making Test A and FAS fluency; frontal AD group) was observed.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call