Two syndromatic forms of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease are illustrated with data from two cases confirmed by necropsy and studied by means of electroencephalogram, evoked potential recording and neuropathological techniques. One of the cases presented the typical hypersynchronous periodic discharges through to be characteristic of this disease. The other did not exhibit epileptiform discharges, showing an evolution in which progressive diffuse slowing was the prominent feature. Cortical spongyosis, gliosis, and neuronal lose were intense in the case showing spikes, and moderate in the one without spikes. Subcortical involvement was similar in both cases. This different topography of pathological involvement might explain, in addition to electroencephalographic findings, the different behavior of somatosensory evoked potentials, which were of larger amplitude in the case showing epileptiform discharges, although in both cases deterioration of clinical state was accompanied by a progressive amplitude decrement in the evoked potential. Sleep induced by barbiturates was disrupted in the case with spikes, its pattern being closer to normal in the case with less severe cortical involvement. A Wada test demonstrated that discharges in the hemispheres were independent. Spike periodicity is discussed. It is postulated that the heavier involvement of cortical layers II to IV deprive the remaining pyramidal cells of inhibitory influences, a condition which might explain the generation of periodic spike discharges.
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