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Varicella zoster virus (VZV) vasculopathy and cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) have similar clinical presentations: both affect cerebrovasculature in the elderly, produce hemorrhage, and can have a protracted course of cognitive decline and other neurological deficits. The cause of CAA is unknown, but amyloid-beta (Aβ) is found within arterial walls. Recent studies show that VZV induces and amylin expression and an amyloid-promoting environment. Thus, we determined if VZV was present in CAA-affected arteries. Two subjects with pathologically-verified CAA were identified postmortem and frontal lobes analyzed by immunohistochemistry for arteries containing VZV, , and amylin and H&E for pathological changes. VZV antigen detection was confirmed by PCR for VZV DNA in the same region. In both CAA cases, sections with cerebral arteries containing VZV antigen with corresponding VZV DNA were identified; VZV antigen co-localized with in media of arteries with histological changes characteristic of CAA. Amylin was also seen in the intima of a VZV-positive artery in the diabetic subject. Not all -containing arteries had VZV, but all VZV-positive arteries contained . VZV antigen co-localized with in some affected arteries from two CAA cases, suggesting a possible association between VZV infection and CAA. Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Citation

Teresa Mescher, Philip J Boyer, Andrew N Bubak, James E Hassell, Maria A Nagel. Detection of varicella zoster virus antigen and DNA in two cases of cerebral amyloid angiopathy. Journal of the neurological sciences. 2021 Mar 15;422:117315

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PMID: 33503519

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