Aktuelle Neurologie 2006; 33 - P620
DOI: 10.1055/s-2006-953444

Vascular parkinsonism and dementia in a CADASIL case with intact nigrostriatal dopaminergic system

F. Wegner 1, K. Strecker 1, J. Schwarz 1, A. Wagner 1, F. Sommerer 1, D.R. Thal 1, W. Heinritz 1, J.P. Schneider 1, K. Kendziorra 1, O. Sabri 1
  • 1Leipzig

Cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukencephalopathy (CADASIL) is responsible for up to 5% of cerebral small vessel diseases manifesting mostly between the age of 40 and 60 years irrespective of vascular risk factors. The clinical spectrum includes migraine, recurrent subcortical strokes, cognitive decline with a subcortical type of dementia, and mood disorders as the most frequent psychiatric manifestations.

A 55-year old male presented to our department with a two year history of progressive immobility, cognitive decline, and urinary incontinence. On examination, the patient showed an atypical parkinsonian syndrome that was not responsive to levodopa (UPDRS III: 45 points) and a moderate dementia (MMSE: 14 points). Brain magnetic resonance imaging suggested small vessel disease. Brain glucose metabolism investigated by positron emission tomography (18F-FDG-PET) was decreased in the temporal cortices, both thalami, and in the left striatum. Striatal dopamine transporter and dopamine D2/D3 receptor binding (123I-FP-CIT- and 123I-IBZM-SPECT) indicated functional integrity of the nigrostriatal dopaminergic system as described for vascular parkinsonism. Electron microscopic evaluation of a skin biopsy was consistant with the diagnosis of CADASIL.

This case report indicates that presentation of an atypical parkinsonian syndrome together with normal results of dopamine transporter and dopamine D2/D3 receptor imaging point towards pathology outside the dopaminergic system of the basal ganglia. In such patients with small vessel disease CADASIL should be considered despite vascular risk factors.