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Case Reports
. 2005 Feb;128(Pt 2):338-44.
doi: 10.1093/brain/awh376. Epub 2005 Jan 5.

Involvement of medullary regions controlling sympathetic output in Lewy body disease

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Case Reports

Involvement of medullary regions controlling sympathetic output in Lewy body disease

Eduardo E Benarroch et al. Brain. 2005 Feb.

Abstract

We sought to determine the involvement of medullary regions controlling sympathetic output in pathologically confirmed diffuse Lewy body disease (LBD). We studied eight limbic or neocortical stage LBD and eight multiple system atrophy (MSA) cases, confirmed neuropathologically, and eight age-matched controls. Five of the LBD cases and all MSA cases had orthostatic hypotension. Serial 50-mum sections obtained from the medulla rostral to the obex were immunostained for tyrosine hydroxylase, tryptophan hydroxylase and alpha-synuclein. Analysis was focused on the ventrolateral medulla and medullary raphe nuclei. In LBD cases, there were Lewy bodies and neurites, as well as dystrophic neurons in the ventrolateral medulla, but the number of catecholaminergic and serotonergic neurons was not significantly reduced. All these groups were depleted in MSA. There were Lewy body pathology and dystrophic neurons in the raphe in all LBD cases. Cell numbers were reduced in both the raphe obscurus and raphe pallidus. Our findings suggest that, although LBD affects medullary autonomic areas, it does so less severely than MSA, particularly in the case of the VLM, which controls sympathetic outputs maintaining arterial pressure. In LBD, orthostatic hypotension may be due primarily to involvement of sympathetic ganglion neurons rather than ventrolateral medulla neurons.

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