4.2 Article

Clinico-Pathological Correlations of the Frontal Lobe Syndrome: Results of a Large Brain Bank Study

Journal

DEMENTIA AND GERIATRIC COGNITIVE DISORDERS
Volume 40, Issue 3-4, Pages 121-129

Publisher

KARGER
DOI: 10.1159/000430460

Keywords

Neuropathology; Neurodegenerative; Frontal lobe syndrome; Frontal-subcortical circuits

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Aims: A clinical frontal lobe syndrome (FLS) is generally attributed to functional or structural disturbances within frontal-subcortical circuits. We studied the distribution of pathological brain changes in FLS. Additionally, the prevalence of FLS among various disorders was studied. Methods: We systematically screened clinical files of donors to the Netherlands Brain Bank (n = 2,814) for FLS. A total of 262 FLS cases were identified, and the distribution of postmortem pathological changes within the frontal-subcortical circuits was extracted from their neuropathological reports. Results: In 244 out of 262 patients (93%), pathological changes within the frontal-subcortical circuits were found: 90 subjects (34%) with frontal cortical pathology and 18 (7%) with pathology restricted to subcortical grey matter nuclei, whereas 136 subjects (52%) showed both cortical and subcortical pathology. In 18 subjects (7%), no pathology was found in the examined areas. The prevalence of FLS was highest in frontal-temporal lobar degeneration, followed by progressive supranuclear palsy and vascular dementia [chi(2) (6, n = 1,561) = 222.64, p < 0.01]. Conclusion: In this large brain bank study, the distribution of pathological changes in subjects with FLS was shown to be frontal-subcortical for the first time. A minority of FLS cases had pathology in the subcortical regions only or no frontal pathology at all. (C) 2015 S. Karger AG, Basel

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