Abstract

Recent reports have suggested a high prevalence of olfactory bulb synucleinopathy in Lewy body disorders but there have been no estimates of the sensitivity or specificity of this as a diagnostic test. We performed α‐synuclein immunostaining on paraffin‐embedded sections of olfactory bulb from a series of neuropathologically‐diagnosed subjects from the Sun Health Research Institute Brain Donation Program/Arizona Parkinson's Disease Consortium. Included in the series were 76 normal elderly individuals, 8 subjects with incidental Lewy body disease (ILBD), 63 with Parkinson's disease (PD) and 79 with dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB). Sections were stained with a sensitive method employing pretreatment with proteinase K. The ratios of positive to negative olfactory bulb staining for each diagnostic category were: normal 5/71; ILBD 8/0; PD 57/6; DLB 74/5. An α‐synuclein‐positive olfactory bulb has 92% sensitivity and 93% specificity for the diagnosis of PD versus normal while for DLB it is 94% and 93%, respectively. As all 8 cases of ILBD had a positive olfactory bulb it appears that olfactory bulb synucleinopathy may also be a reliable marker of presymptomatic Lewy body disorders. Supported by the AZ Dept. of Health Services, NIA P30 AG19610 and the Prescott Family Initiative of the Michael J. Fox Foundation.

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