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Progressive neurodegenerative disease characterized clinically by movement abnormalities including the triad of resting tremor, bradykinesia, and cogwheel rigidity with histologic findings of pigmented neuron loss within the substantia nigra and elsewhere
Presence of α-synuclein immunoreactive Lewy bodies in affected areas
“Brain stem-predominant,” “neocortical,” “limbic,” and “amygdala-predominant” types are now recognized within the spectrum of Lewy body disorders
Synonyms: idiopathic parkinsonism, paralysis agitans, shaking palsy, Parkinson's disease of the Lewy body type, brain stem Lewy body disease
Sporadic Parkinson's disease: mean age of onset around 61 years
No gender predominance
Prevalence: markedly increases with age
Whites: 150 to 400 per 100,000 individuals
Asians: 100 to 130 per 100,000 individuals
African Americans: 105 per 100,000 individuals
Overall incidence: 15 to 20 per 100,000/year
Symptoms caused by dopamine deficiency from substantia nigra degeneration
Half of patients initially present with resting tremor in unilateral hand or leg with progressive involvement of other extremities
Other features include the following:
Cogwheel rigidity
Bradykinesia and akinesia (slowness and absent movement)
Righting reflex loss and gait abnormalities
Loss of automatic movements of skeletal muscle (eye blinking, masked facies)
Autonomic dysfunction (bowel and bladder dysfunction)
Cognitive decline and depression
Disease progression to death within 8 to 15 years after symptom onset
Symptomatic treatment with l -DOPA, dopamine agonists, monoamine oxidase B inhibitors
Deep brain stimulation may improve symptoms
No specific radiographic findings
Mild cortical atrophy may be present
Depigmentation/pallor of substantia nigra and locus coeruleus
Pigmented neuron loss within the substantia nigra and locus coeruleus
Lewy bodies: single to multiple intracytoplasmic inclusions composed of round, eosinophilic central material surrounded by prominent pale haloes; found within brain stem neurons
Cortical Lewy bodies (usually not the dominant feature): intraneuronal, eosinophilic, rounded to reniform inclusions without prominent haloes
Prominent within cerebral cortical neurons of layers V and VI of temporal lobe, cingulated gyrus, insula
“Pale bodies”: intracytoplasmic, amorphous, pale, eosinophilic material present within pigment neurons which displaces neuromelanin to cell periphery; may be precursors to classic Lewy bodies
Lewy neurites: dystrophic/degenerated neurites; most commonly found in the hippocampus (CA2-3 region) and amygdala (accessory cortical nuclei)
Current consensus guidelines score Lewy body pathology based on regional involvement:
None : no Lewy bodies or related changes in α-synuclein immunohistochemistry
Brain stem predominant : Lewy bodies in medulla, pons, or midbrain
Limbic (transitional) : Lewy bodies in cingulate or entorhinal cortices, usually with brain stem involvement
Neocortical (diffuse) : Lewy bodies in frontal, temporal, or parietal cortices, usually with involvement of brain stem and limbic sites, which may include amygdala
Amygdala predominant : Lewy bodies in amygdala with paucity of Lewy bodies in the preceding regions
Lewy bodies and Lewy neurites: positive for α-synuclein (most specific antigen), ubiquitin, neurofilament, amyloid β peptide, amyloid precursor protein
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