Cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts
and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL) is a hereditary brain disease
with a variety of neurologic and psychiatric manifestations.
We studied 3 members of a family who each had leukoencephalopathy
on neuroimaging studies and a characteristic mutation for CADASIL
in the notch 3 region of chromosome 19q12. In all 3 cases,
neurobehavioral impairment dominated the clinical picture, and
a pattern of psychiatric dysfunction heralding cognitive decline
emerged. Neuropsychological evaluation revealed diverse deficits,
but a profile of frontal lobe dysfunction, declarative memory
impairment suggestive of a retrieval deficit, and relatively
preserved language was evident. These cases provide a
cross-sectional study of the evolution of CADASIL, and suggest
that, as in other diseases characterized by white matter dementia,
psychiatric dysfunction may occur initially, followed by pervasive
cognitive dysfunction later in the course of the disease. CADASIL
should be considered in young adults with unexplained
leukoencephalopathy on neuroimaging studies, and in those with
neurobehavioral dysfunction and a suggestive family history.
(JINS, 2001, 7, 768–774.)