Background: Neurofibrillary tangles and beta-amyloid plaques have been observed in the amygdala in Alzheimer disease. A disproportionate abundance of this abnormality in the amygdala may cause behavioral symptoms similar to Klüver-Bucy syndrome.
Objectives: To describe an atypical behavioral presentation of Alzheimer disease and to review the literature on the subject.
Design: Case study.
Setting: Outpatient specialty clinic.
Patient: A 70-year-old man with progressive behavioral symptoms of hyperorality, hypersexuality, hypermetamorphosis, visual agnosia, hyperphagia, and apathy who died at age 77 of asphyxiation on a foreign object.
Main outcome measures: Clinical symptomatology, brain imaging, and neuropathology.
Results: The pathologic diagnosis was Alzheimer disease with abundant tangles and plaques in the lateral amygdala.
Conclusions: This case represents a variant of Alzheimer disease with prominent amygdala abnormalities and a Klüver-Bucy phenotype that was misdiagnosed as frontotemporal dementia. Clinical and imaging findings that may aid in accurate diagnosis are reviewed.