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Diffuse Lewy Body Disease and Progressive Dementia
Neurol 38:1520-1528, Burkhardt,C.R.,et al, 1988
See this aricle in Pubmed

Article Abstract
Thirty cases of diffuse Lewy body disease(DLBD)have been reported, primarily by neuropathologists,but an associated clinical syndrome has not been clearly defined.Four recent cases have led us to examine the clinicopathologic correlations.Patients are usually elderly,with symptoms lasting from 1 to 20 years.Progressive dementia or psychosis is typically the first and most prominent feature.Parkinsonian signs,initially mild or absent,become common eventually,and rigidity is usually severe.Classic, concentric Lewy bodies are found profusely in the brainstem,basal forebrain,and hyopthalamic nuclei,while less well defined"Lewy-like"bodies occur in limbic structures and in deep neocortical layers.In addition, focal spongiform changes in the mesial temporal lobe were found in two of our cases.We suggest that DLBD may be another specific cause of progressive dementia.
 
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aphasia
cachexia
dementia
hallucination
inclusion bodies
inclusion bodies,eosinophilic cytoplasmic
Lewy body
Lewy body disease,diffuse
memory,impairment of
misdiagnosis
myoclonus
neuropathology
orthostatic hypotension
Parkinson disease
Parkinson disease,misdiagnosis
Parkinsonism syndrome
psychosis
rigidity
spongy degeneration of brain
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