Neuropathological
Changes in Chronic Adult Hydrocephalus: Cortical Biopsies and
Autopsy Findings
Marc
R. Del Bigio, Erico R. Cardoso and William C. Halliday
Abstract:
Background: The cortical changes resulting from
chronic hydrocephalus in adults are not well defined. Methods:
Retrospective analysis of twenty-one patients (age
64-88 years) with a clinical diagnosis of "normal pressure
hydrocephalus" who underwent cortical biopsy at the time of
intracranial pressure monitoring or shunt insertion, and eight
patients who were biopsied but not shunted. Eleven brains
(age 26-92 years), seven from patients who could be considered
to have "normal pressure hydrocephalus", were also examined
following autopsy. Age- and sex-matched control brains with
small ventricles and no history of dementia were compared
to the hydrocephalic brains. Senile plaques and neurofibrillary
tangles were assessed semiquantitatively and a non-parametric
statistical analysis was employed. Results:
Five biopsies exhibited both senile plaques and rare neurofibrillary
tangles, while two had only neurofibrillary tangles. Neurofibrillary
tangles were more prevalent in hydrocephalic brains than in
controls. There was no difference in the prevalence of senile
plaques between the two groups. Grumose bodies in the substantia
nigra were identified in five autopsy brains, a prevalence
higher than in control brains. Conclusions:
These pathological features are not specific for hydrocephalus;
however, they suggest that long-standing ventriculomegaly
is associated with degenerative brain changes in sites beyond
the periventricular white matter. The presence of senile plaques
in cortical biopsies from hydrocephalic patients does not
appear to be a contraindication to shunting; however a prospective
study in patients undergoing intracranial pressure monitoring
would better address the issue.
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Can.
J. Neurol. Sci. 1997; 24: 121-126
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