An MRI revealed no sign
of angiopathy in the carotid and vertebral arteries but did reveal evidence of deep white matter disease, demyelination and possible multiple sclerosis.
Not exact matches
While approximately 80 percent
of Alzheimer's disease patients also have cerebral amyloid
angiopathy, or amyloid beta deposits in the brain's blood vessels that increase the risk for stroke and dementia, the predominant amyloid beta pathology is plaques.
Spatial distribution
of white - matter hyperintensities in Alzheimer disease, cerebral amyloid
angiopathy, and healthy aging.
Characteristic neuropathological findings were focal depletion
of diffuse and neuritic plaques, but not
of amyloid
angiopathy, and the presence
of small numbers
of extremely dense (collapsed) plaques surrounded by active microglia, and multinucleated giant cells filled with dense Abeta42 and Abeta40, in addition to severe small cerebral blood vessel disease and multiple cortical hemorrhages.
Affected family members presented between 61 and 74 years, with variable presence
of microbleeds / cerebral amyloid
angiopathy and electroencephalographic abnormalities.