AbstractBackground: Binswanger's disease is a special type of vascular dementia, which requires further reappraisal and redefinition. In a geriatric psychiatry hospital (with 207 beds), we treated several patients who probably had this disease, and tried to establish a basis for making a clinical diagnosis.Methods: From 2001 to 2005, we treated seven inpatients with noteworthy symptoms, who had been under observation in hospital wards for between 4 and 19 months. Here, for these patients, we examine the history of the illness, the condition of the patients at admission, the clinical course, and serial computed tomography (CT) findings.Results: Characteristic features of the clinical courses and symptoms of these patients were: (i) onset occurred late in life (patients were aged in their 70s and 80s); (ii) vascular events were atypical and transient, leaving few permanent neurological sequelae; (iii) progression of dementia and other somatic or neurologic symptoms was continuous and fast in four patients, and rather gradual in three patients; (iv) there was an alternating or changing pattern in all patients’ state of consciousness, mood, behavior, or manner of respiration; symptoms such as mutism, lack of facial expression, and apparent indifference were counterbalanced with such behaviors as occasional unexpected smiles, pertinent verbal responses, and sincere gazes; (v) significant negative symptoms were a lack of dysarthria, lack of dysphagia, lack of involuntary movement, and occasional lack of muscle rigidity. The primary CT findings were: (i) moderate to severe generalized (involving whole of centrum semiovale), diffuse and homogeneous (except one patient) leukoaraiosis of the hemispheric white matter, including the temporal lobe (except one patient), all (except one patient) frontal and parietal dominant, with the corpus callosum involved in one case; (ii) diffuse and generalized atrophy of the pallium, most marked in the frontal and parietal lobes, restricted to the frontal and parietal lobes in three patients, and to the frontal, parietal and temporal lobes in four patients; (iii) atrophy of the medial temporal lobe was inconstant and, when present, ambiguous in degree; (iv) slight to moderate enlargement of the bilateral lateral and third ventricles; (v) a few small lacunae in the basal ganglia and thalamus in one patient, inhomogeneous macular changes of density in the basal ganglia and thalamus in two patients, and no such findings in the remaining four patients.Conclusion: We have described a group of patients with dementia characterized by a clinical course with episodes of rather transient vascular intervention, psychopathology characteristic of organic dementia, fluctuating psychotic symptoms in combination, and intensive extensive homogeneous leukoaraiosis of the hemispheric white matter on CT. These clinical and CT neuroradiological findings seem to warrant the clinical diagnosis of Binswanger's disease, which should be reconfirmed at autopsy. Early research on this disease by Binswanger, Alzheimer, Nissl and others is reviewed. Some points of differential diagnosis in serial neuroradiology are discussed in relation to multilacunar dementia.