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Microvascular degeneration in hereditary cystatin C amyloid angiopathy of the brain.
[hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis]
Hereditary
cystatin
C
amyloid
angiopathy
(
HCCAA
)
,
an
autosomal
dominant
form
of
cerebral
amyloid
angiopathy
(
CAA
)
occurring
primarily
in
Iceland
,
is
characterized
by
a
variant
cystatin
C
amyloid
deposition
in
the
walls
of
cerebral
parenchymal
and
leptomeningeal
vessels
.
Cystatin
C
is
also
found
to
colocalize
with
amyloid
beta
/
A
4
protein
in
cerebral
vessel
walls
of
patients
with
Alzheimer
's
disease
(
AD
)
,
sporadic
CAA
,
and
hereditary
cerebral
hemorrhage
with
amyloidosis
,
Dutch
type
(
HCHWA-D
)
.
The
abundance
of
cystatin
C
deposition
in
cerebral
blood
vessel
walls
suggests
that
cellular
elements
of
the
vessel
wall
itself
may
play
a
role
in
its
deposition
.
Microvascular
changes
in
the
brains
of
HCCAA
patients
were
investigated
by
single
-
and
double
-label
immunohistochemistry
.
We
found
that
cystatin
C
amyloid
immunoreactivity
was
present
not
only
in
cerebral
cortical
and
leptomeningeal
vessels
,
but
also
in
white
matter
parenchymal
vessels
.
Cystatin
C
deposition
was
more
prominent
in
the
media
of
parenchymal
vessels
and
in
the
adventitia
of
leptomeningeal
vessels
.
Smooth
muscle
(
sm
)
cells
were
few
or
could
not
be
identified
within
vessel
walls
showing
extensive
cystatin
C
deposition
,
suggesting
progressive
loss
of
these
cells
as
cystatin
C
accumulates
.
However
,
in
less
severely
affected
vessels
,
cystatin
C
was
present
in
cells
that
also
had
the
phenotype
of
sm
,
suggesting
that
sm
cells
synthesize
or
process
cystatin
C
.
Cystatin
C
immunoreactivity
was
in
addition
,
detected
in
some
neuronal
cell
bodies
throughout
the
cortex
in
patients
with
HCCAA
and
AD
-related
CAA
.
Our
results
indicate
that
cellular
components
of
the
vessel
walls
may
play
an
important
role
in
cystatin
C
deposition
,
as
they
do
in
beta
/
A
4
deposition
in
AD
-related
CAA
.
Cystatin
C
deposition
within
the
vascular
media
and
adventitia
,
with
associated
vessel
wall
injury
as
manifested
by
sm
cell
loss
,
represents
microvascular
degeneration
that
leads
to
cerebral
hemorrhage
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"adventitia"
symptom
hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis
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