A brain biopsy from a 20-year-old patient whose clinical course was marked by progressive dementia and chorea since age 10 years showed increased amounts of lipofuscin, abnormal mitochondria, and other organelles in cortical neurons, neurites, and astrocytes. Juvenile Huntington chorea was confirmed at autopsy. High levels of three histone-like proteins (molecular weight 10,000 to 16,000) in the microsomal fraction of purified neurons were found by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Fatty acids were abnormal in white matter sphingomyelin. These ultrastructural and biochemical findings conformed to those established in adult Huntington chorea, thus strengthening the concept of a uniform pathologic process in adult and juvenile Huntington diseases in spite of some clinical and histologic differences.
A micromethod for the investigation of the fatty acid composition of sphingomyelin in presented. In the cerebral white matter of 17 normal adult brains, analyzed for reference, the predominant fatty acids are C 18:0 and C 24:1. Our results are in agreement with those of other authors. Short chained fatty acids are relatively increased in young children; this shift is typical of "immature" myelin. Similar changes are described here in old persons and cases of non-specific brain damage associated with demyelination (autolysis, chronic uremia, juvenile chorea). Sphingomyelin fatty acid composition can be considered a sensitive measure of both disturbed myelination and demyelination.
A simple gas-liquid-chromatographic method employing a nitrogen selective detector for the quantitative determination of clozapine in serum is presented. The method involves after the addition of dibenzepine as internal standard the extraction into diethylether followed by analysis of the extract dissolved in methanol. Detector linearity was established over the range of 100-1000 ng/ml serum. Clozapine levels of 9 manic patients analysed by this method are presented and discussed. A linear relationship between daily intake (mg/kg body weight) and serum levels (ng/ml) was established.
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