Human spongiform encephalopathy: the National Institutes of Health series of 300 cases of experimentally transmitted disease

P Brown, CJ Gibbs Jr… - Annals of Neurology …, 1994 - Wiley Online Library
P Brown, CJ Gibbs Jr, P Rodgers‐Johnson, DM Asher, MP Sulima, A Bacote, LG Goldfarb…
Annals of Neurology: Official Journal of the American Neurological …, 1994Wiley Online Library
We present a synthesis of clinical, neuropathological, and biological details of the National
Institutes of Health series of 300 experimentally transmitted cases of spongiform
encephalopathy from among more than 1,000 cases of various neurological disorders
inoculated into nonhuman primates during the past 30 years. The series comprises 278
subjects with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, of whom 234 had sporadic, 36 familial, and 8
iatrogenic disease; 18 patients with kuru; and 4 patients with Gerstmann-Sträussler …
Abstract
We present a synthesis of clinical, neuropathological, and biological details of the National Institutes of Health series of 300 experimentally transmitted cases of spongiform encephalopathy from among more than 1,000 cases of various neurological disorders inoculated into nonhuman primates during the past 30 years. The series comprises 278 subjects with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, of whom 234 had sporadic, 36 familial, and 8 iatrogenic disease; 18 patients with kuru; and 4 patients with Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker syndrome. Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, numerically by far the most important representative, showed an average age at onset of 60 years, with the freqauent early appearance of cerebellar and visual/oculomotor signs, and a broad spectrum of clinical features during the subsequent course of illness, which was usually fatal in less than 6 months. Characteristic spongiform neuropathology was present in all but 2 subjects. Microscopically visible kuru-type amyloid plaques were found in 5% of patients with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, 75% of those with kuru, and 100% of those with Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker syndrome; brain biopsy was diagnostic in 95% of cases later confirmed at autopsy, and proteinase-resistant amyloid protein was identified in Western blots of brain extracts from 88% of tested subjects. Experimental transmission rates were highest for iatrogenic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (100%), kuru (95%), and sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (90%), and considerably lower for most familial forms of disease (68%). Incubation periods as well as the durations and character of illness showed great variability, even in animals receiving the same inoculum, mirroring the spectrum of clinical profiles seen in human disease. Infectivity reached average levels of nearly 10 5 median lethal doses/gm of brain tissue, but was only irregularly present (and at much lower levels) in tissues outside the brain, and except for cerebrospinal fluid, was never detected in bodily secretions or excretions.
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