Golgi and electronmicroscopic studies of spongifom encephalopathy

Abstract
Golgi impregnations of cerebral biopsies from two patients suffering from Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (subacute spongiform encephalopathy) revealed striking loss of dendritic spines of pyramidal neurons and unusual focal spherical distensions of dendritic and axonal processes. Light and electronmicroscopic studies disclosed spongiform changes, which seemed to be caused by intracytoplasmic vacuoles and expansion of the plasmalemmal membranes of neurons and astrocytes. Although the diagnostic biopsies were performed at a markedly symptomatic stage of the disease, there was no evidence of neuronal cell loss. Neuronal changes in Golgi impregnations of cerebral cortex from hamsters infected with scrapie were essentially identical to those in the human biopsies. The loss of dendritic spines of pyramidal cells and spherical swellings of axons and dendrites thus seem to be characteristic of spongiform encephalopathies, and probably account in part for the clinical neurologic manifestations, which may be severe in the relative absence of neuronal death.