Progressive Supranuclear Palsy
- 1 April 1964
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Neurology
- Vol. 10 (4), 333-359
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archneur.1964.00460160003001
Abstract
Introduction In this report we are describing a progressive brain disease featured by supranuclear ophthalmoplegia affecting chiefly vertical gaze, pseudobulbar palsy, dysarthria, dystonic rigidity of the neck and upper trunk, and other less constant cerebellar and pyramidal symptoms. Dementia has usually remained mild. This disease would appear to be predominantly a nerve cell degeneration centered chiefly in the brain stem. The fully developed clinical picture presented by this disease seems to follow a fairly definitive pattern and does not conform to the classical system degenerations such as motor neurone disease, paralysis agitans, cerebellar degeneration, Creuzfeldt-Jakob disease, or the presenile dementias. Yet it would seem unlikely that the disease shown by our cases is a new one, and similar earlier cases may well have been accepted as arteriosclerotic parkinsonism when that diagnosis was used in a very broad sense such as in Critchley's monograph of 1929.1There are some resemblances toKeywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Impregnation of Axons and Terminal Buttons in Routine, Paraffin, or Frozen Sections of Central and Peripheral Nervous Tissue Adaptation of Hortega's Silver Carbonate Method for NeurofibrilsAmerican Journal of Clinical Pathology, 1958
- THE BRAIN-STEM LESIONS IN PARKINSONISMJournal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 1953
- INCLUSION ENCEPHALITIS WITH A CLINICOPATHOLOGIC REPORT OF 3 CASES1950
- ARTERIOSCLEROTIC PARKINSONISMBrain, 1929