Abstract

Parvalbumin-immunoreactive (PARV-ir) neurons were studied in the temporal neocortex of 4 normal subjects and in 7 patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) whose brains were removed from the skull between 1 and 4 h after death and immediately fixed by perfusion through the carotid arteries to minimize pitfalls related to delayed tissue processing. Freezing microtome sections were immunostained free-floating for PARV using a well characterized monoclonal antibody diluted at 1:5000 and the peroxidase-antiperoxidase method. PARV-ir cells predominated in layers III, IV and V and were classified as bitufted cells and small, medium and large multipolar neurons according to their dendritic arbors. Immunoreactive cell processes surrounding the soma of neighbouring cells and immunoreactive vertical strings of buttons were consistent, respectively, with terminal axons of basket cells and chandelier neurons. The number of PARV-ir cells in the superior (T1), middle (T2) and inferior (T3) temporal gyri was variable from one case to another in both normal and pathological cases. Only 1 of 7 patients with AD had significantly reduced numbers of PARV-ir neurons, thus suggesting that PARV-ir cells in the neocortex are relatively resistant to degeneration in Alzheimer's disease.

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