Physical basis of cognitive alterations in alzheimer's disease: Synapse loss is the major correlate of cognitive impairment

Robert D. Terry(University of California San Diego), Eliezer Masliah(University of California San Diego), David P. Salmon(University of California San Diego), Nelson Butters(University of California San Diego), Richard DeTeresa(University of California San Diego), Robert Hill(University of California San Diego), Lawrence A. Hansen(University of California San Diego), Robert Katzman(University of California San Diego)
Annals of Neurology
October 1, 1991
Cited by 4,403

Abstract

We present here both linear regressions and multivariate analyses correlating three global neuropsychological tests with a number of structural and neurochemical measurements performed on a prospective series of 15 patients with Alzheimer's disease and 9 neuropathologically normal subjects. The statistical data show only weak correlations between psychometric indices and plaques and tangles, but the density of neocortical synapses measured by a new immunocytochemical/densitometric technique reveals very powerful correlations with all three psychological assays. Multivariate analysis by stepwise regression produced a model including midfrontal and inferior parietal synapse density, plus inferior parietal plaque counts with a correlation coefficient of 0.96 for Mattis's Dementia Rating Scale. Plaque density contributed only 26% of that strength.


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