Abstract
This is a report of an autopsy case of Wilson's disease with widespread degeneration of the cerebral cortex and white matter, the basal ganglia and thalamus and, to a lesser degree, the cerebellum and brain stem. The patient was a 28-year-old man at the time of death with the clinical course of a 20-year duration. The lesions consisted of spongy degeneration leading to a cavity formation with insufficient glia fiber proliferation. We noted the characteristic findings of Alzheimer glia (Types I and II) and Opalski cells and the new formation in capillaries. The distribution of the changes in the hemispheres showed the typical pattern with a tendency of preferential superior and anterior localization and a relative preservation of the hippocampal formation, carcarine areas, amygdaloid nuclei and the hypothalamus. Similar cases in the literature were reviewed.
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