Here at SciShow, we don’t cover a lot of
celebrity news, unless we’re talking about
celebrity engineers and scientists.
When we do, we’re usually here to explain
something science-related that’s happened
in a celebrity’s life.
So today we’re going to talk about Robin
Williams, whose autopsy has shown that he
was suffering from the early stages of a disease
called Lewy body dementia.
This condition is debilitating, and...surprisingly
common, for something that most people have
never heard of until recently. But it’s
the second most common cause of dementia,
after Alzheimer’s disease.
It’s also the most frequently misdiagnosed
cause of dementia, partly because it’s often
mistaken for Parkinson’s disease...until
the hallucinations set in.
That’s what happened to Robin Williams,
who had been diagnosed with the early stages
of Parkinson’s at the time of his death.
But his autopsy revealed small clusters known
as Lewy bodies in his cerebral cortex -- a
typical sign of Lewy body dementia.
Lewy bodies are small clumps of proteins,
mainly one called alpha-synuclein.
Everyone has alpha-synuclein in their brains,
as well as other tissues, like their hearts
and muscles.
It’s found in nerve cells, and appears to
have something to do with the release of neurotransmitters,
the chemicals that help nerves communicate
with each other, although its role isn’t
really understood.
What we do know is that it’s perfectly healthy
to have alpha-synuclein in your body.
Scientists still aren’t sure what causes
Lewy body dementia, but Lewy bodies seem to
form when something -- like a mutation or
damage to the gene responsible for making
alpha-synuclein -- causes those protein molecules
can be created in the wrong shape.
And when alpha-synuclein is folded incorrectly,
it can start to clump together.
Those clumps become Lewy bodies and slowly
accumulate, spreading through the brain and
eventually begin to interfere with its neurons’
ability to communicate with each other.
In Parkinson’s, Lewy bodies form in the
brain stem and the substantia nigra, the part
of the brain that produces the neurotransmitter
dopamine.
Both of those areas help control muscle movement,
so the result is a loss of coordination.
All signals for muscle movement have to pass
through your brain stem. And dopamine is a
chemical we’ve talked about before, for
its role in reward and addiction, but it’s
also part of what lets you make smooth, uninterrupted
movements.
Damage to either or both of these regions
leads to the tremors, stiffness, and difficulty
in walking that are the most visible symptoms
of Parkinson’s disease.
So if the formation of Lewy bodies causes
Parkinson’s, then what makes Lewy body dementia
a different disease? And why haven’t you
heard of it?
Well, the answers to those questions turn
out to be related: you probably haven’t
heard of it because we only zeroed in on the
differences between Lewy body dementia and
Parkinson’s in the 1990s.
And it’s misdiagnosed so frequently -- as
either Parkinson’s or Alzheimer’s disease,
depending on an individual’s symptoms -- that
it hasn’t attracted much attention.
The difference between Lewy body dementia
and Parkinson’s comes from where those Lewy
bodies form. The build-up of Lewy bodies during
Parkinson’s disease happens mainly in the
brain stem.
But in Lewy body dementia, those bodies form
throughout the cerebral cortex. Including,
sometimes, in the substantia nigra, which
can give Lewy body dementia some Parkinson’s-like
symptoms.
Parkinson’s is easier for doctors to diagnose,
because the brain stem is small, and packed
with all of our brain’s simplest equipment,
which we mostly understand. We know what it
looks like when it stops working.
And it helps that the Lewy bodies that form
there are pretty large, and therefore easy
to see during an autopsy, which is useful
for researchers. We’ve known about them
since 1912, when Dr. Friedrich Lewy discovered
them in the brains of people with Parkinson’s
disease.
But in Lewy body dementia, the protein clumps
are so small that until very recently, we
couldn’t detect them at all. New methods
for studying brain tissue allowed us to see
Lewy bodies in other parts of the brain for
the first time only in the 1990s.
But, even if they’re hard to see, having
those protein clusters forming in brain cells
everywhere gives Lewy body dementia a long
list of symptoms that Parkinson’s doesn’t
share, which is what doctors do use to diagnose
it.
Things like hallucinations, loss of spatial
reasoning, sleep disorders, and cognitive
and memory impairment similar to Alzheimer’s.
According to statements from Williams’s
wife and according to the autopsy report,
Robin Williams was not suffering from any
of those advanced symptoms at the time of
his death. Lewy bodies accumulate slowly,
over years, with gradually worsening symptoms.
So is there a cure, or at least a treatment?
Well, no. Not yet.
Lewy body dementia is especially hard to treat,
because patients tend to have a severe sensitivity
to many of the antipsychosis medications that
doctors might prescribe to help manage the
hallucinations.
But we can hope that Robin Williams’s diagnosis
might help bring some awareness to these diseases.
Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow
News, and thanks especially to our President of Space SR Foxley.
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