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      Clinicopathologic correlations in a large Alzheimer disease center autopsy cohort: neuritic plaques and neurofibrillary tangles "do count" when staging disease severity.

      Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology
      Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Alzheimer Disease, epidemiology, metabolism, pathology, Amyloid beta-Peptides, Brain, Cohort Studies, Disease Progression, Female, Humans, Male, Mental Status Schedule, Neurofibrillary Tangles, Neurologic Examination, Neuropil Threads, Neuropsychological Tests, Plaque, Amyloid, Postmortem Changes, Severity of Illness Index, Statistics as Topic

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          Abstract

          There is uncertainty regarding the association of cognitive decline in Alzheimer disease (AD) with classic histopathologic features- neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) and "neuritic" amyloid plaques (NPs). This uncertainty fuels doubts about the diagnostic importance of NFTs and NPs and leads to confusion regarding hypotheses of AD pathogenesis. Three hundred ninety subjects who underwent longitudinal premortem clinical workup and postmortem quantitative neuropathologic assessment served as the group to address this issue. Subjects with concomitant brain disease(s) were analyzed independently to more accurately assess the contribution of distinct pathologies to cognitive decline. More than 60% of patients of all age groups had important non-AD brain pathologies. However, subjects without superimposed brain diseases showed strong correlations between AD-type pathology counts (NFTs > NPs) and premortem Mini-Mental State Examination scores. The observed correlation was stronger in isocortex than in allocortex and was maintained across age groups including patients older than 90 years. A theoretical model is proposed in which our results are interpreted to support the "amyloid cascade hypothesis" of AD pathogenesis. Our data show that there are many important contributory causes to cognitive decline in older persons. However, NFTs and NPs should not be dismissed as irrelevant in AD based on clinicopathologic correlation.

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