Abstract

Two patients with acute Wernicke's encephalopathy, with the diagnosis confirmed pathologically at autopsy, showed substantial vacuolation and neuronal degeneration in discrete nuclei of the thalamus. Thalamic vacuolation has not been described previously in acute Wernicke's encephalopathy. The use of frozen sections to minimize processing artifact was fundamental in demonstrating this pathology. The pathogenic mechanism underlying this change appears to be different to that seen in the more typical periventricular, mamillary body and brainstem lesions. We hypothesize that a specific neural pathway may be involved and suggest that this pathway could be the ascending nitric oxide-containing cholinergic pathway from the brainstem.

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