Accumulation of abnormally phosphorylated tau results in the formation of neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) in the neuronal cell soma and neuropil threads (NTs) in the cell processes. In the present study, we used immunohistochemistry to investigate serially cut thick tissue sections from the brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and non-demented elderly subjects. In the early stages of neurofibrillary pathology, clusters of NTs occurred occasionally in the cerebral cortex. Each NTs cluster, the entire extent of which was observed in the serial sections, corresponded to a dendritic tree that was arborized from a tau-positive neuron. Adult human brain contains six tau isoforms with three having three carboxyl-terminal tandem repeat sequences that are encoded by exon 10 (3R-tau) and the other three having four repeat sequences (4R-tau). Three isoform patterns, 3R-tau(+)/4R-tau(-), 3R-tau(-)/4R-tau(+) and 3R-tau(+)/4R-tau(+), were seen in NFTs in early stage AD lesions. In an individual neuron, the isoform pattern was consistent between the NFTs in the cell soma and the NTs in the cell processes. The results of this study indicate that, in early stages of AD and age-associated neurofibrillary changes, tau accumulates simultaneously in the cell soma and cell processes of affected neurons. The process of AD and age-associated tau pathology is not tau-isoform-specific, but the ratio of 3R-tau and 4R-tau isoforms involved in the neurofibrillary changes varies and is specific to individual neurons.