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Mixed tau and TDP-43 pathology in a patient with unclassifiable primary progressive aphasia

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Version 2 2015-11-27, 21:35
Version 1 2015-11-27, 21:35
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posted on 2015-11-27, 21:35 authored by Eoin P. Flanagan, Joseph R. Duffy, Jennifer L. Whitwell, Prashanthi Vemuri, Dennis W. Dickson, Keith A. Josephs

Classifying primary progressive aphasia (PPA) into variants that may predict the underlying pathology is important. However, some PPA patients cannot be classified. A 78-year-old woman had unclassifiable PPA characterized by anomia, dysarthria, and apraxia of speech without agrammatism. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed left mesial temporal atrophy and 18-flourodeoxy-glucose positron emission tomography showed left anterior temporal and posterior frontal (premotor) hypometabolism. Autopsy revealed a mixed tauopathy (argyrophilic grain disease) and transactive response-DNA-binding-protein-43 proteinopathy. Dual pathologies may explain the difficulty classifying some PPA patients and recognizing this will be important as new imaging techniques (particularly tau-positron emission tomography) are introduced and patients begin enrollment in clinical trials targeting the underlying proteinopathy.

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