Skip Navigation
Skip to contents
Results by Year

View Wide

Filter

ARTICLE TYPE

PUBLICATION DATE

9 results
Display

An Autopsy Case of Pick's Disease

Lee KS, Shim DS, Park SM, Lee YS, Yang KH

  • KMID: 2342868
  • J Korean Neurol Assoc.
  • 2000 Nov;18(6):786-789.
Pick's disease is a rare neurodegenerative disorder presenting cortical type of dementia. Pick's disease shows unique clinical and pathological features, that are due to a degeneration of fronto-temporal lobes of...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Autopy Results of Clinically Diagnosed Alzheimer's Disease

Choi KG

Eight hundred and eighty four autopsy brains from patients with clinically diagnosed Alzheimer's disease were examined pathologically. Six hundred ninety eitht(79.96%) of the 884 cases fullfilled histological criteria for Alzheimer's...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
A Case Report of Progressive Subcortical Gliosis

Kim SY, La DL, Park SH, Koo HS, Chi JG

  • KMID: 1957249
  • J Korean Neurol Assoc.
  • 1995 Sep;13(3):696-702.
A patient presenting with the characteristic clinical features of the dementia of Pick's type is described, in whom neuropathological examination of brain biopsy material revealed atypical features, including extensive subcotical...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
A Case of Frontotemporal Lobe Dementia

Hong CH, Cha KR, Oh BH

  • KMID: 2333813
  • J Korean Geriatr Psychiatry.
  • 2003 Dec;7(2):185-190.
Frontotemporal lobe dementia have been underevaluated because of various clinical features, changing diagnostic criteria, and indifference of clinicians. It is important that frontotemporal lobe dementia patient showing behavioral and lingual...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Clinical Features of Other Dementias

Cheon JS

  • KMID: 2333775
  • J Korean Geriatr Psychiatry.
  • 2000 Jun;4(1):58-71.
Dementias can be calssified into cortical, subcortical, cortical-subcortical and multifocal ones based on the major pathological distribution within the brain. The literatures of recent knowledge about clinical features of other...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
A case of Pick's disease presenting with progressive nonfluent speech

Ahn SS, Na DL, Jung PW, Lee JI, Suh YL, Kim SE

  • KMID: 1536902
  • J Korean Neurol Assoc.
  • 1997 Oct;15(5):1162-1172.
BACKGROUND AND SIGNIFICANCE: Frontotemporal dementia is a behavioral disorder arising from nonAlzheimer's disease atrophy of frontal and anterior temporal lobe. Clinical manifestations include frontal lobe dysfunction. Kluver-Bucy syndrome or progressive...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Clinical and Pathological Characteristics of Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration(FTLD) and Molecular Genetics of Tau Protein

Woo SI

  • KMID: 2202778
  • J Korean Soc Biol Psychiatry.
  • 2003 Nov;10(2):97-106.
Criticisms about amyloid cascade hypothesis of Alzheimer's disease(AD) are based on the findings, first, that the degree of dementia does not correlate with the number of plaques, and second, that...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Clinical Features and Therapeutic Approaches of Frontotemporal Dementia

Lee KJ

  • KMID: 2137453
  • J Korean Geriatr Psychiatry.
  • 2012 Dec;16(2):67-74.
Frontotemporal dementia (FTD), formerly called Pick's disease, is a progressive dementia that is associated with focal atrophy of the frontal and/or temporal lobes. FTD has three major clinical subtypes ;...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
A case of Primary Progressive Aphasia (PPA)

Lee AY, Oh SK, Kim J, Kim JM

  • KMID: 2342650
  • J Korean Neurol Assoc.
  • 1998 Apr;16(2):219-223.
BACKGROUND AND SIGNIFICANCE: PPA is the clinical syndrome that reveals a marked, progressive loss of language functions over time with relative preservation of non-linguistic cognitive functions. Patients with this syndrome...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close

Go to Top

Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr