Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 July 2018
In an attempt to determine the nature and conditions of formation of the aluminium silicate precipitates present at the core of senile plaque in the brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease, aluminosilicate precipitates have been prepared and equilibrated for up to one year in physiological saline conditions at 40°C and a pH near 7·4. The structure and composition of these precipitates, and the associated concentrations of free silicic acid, were similar to those found in systems buffered with CaCO3 at 20–25°C. Imogolite-like products with Si : Al ratios near 0·5 were obtained at silicic acid concentrations <100 µm, and hydrous feldspathoid products with ratios ≥1·0 became dominant at silicic acid concentrations greater than ∼150 µm. These products do not match senile plaque precipitates, which have Si : Al ratios ≥1·0, but form in an environment with <100 µm Si. The relative stability of aluminium hydroxides, proto-imogolite allophane and hydrous feldspathoids are estimated from equilibrated silicic acid concentrations.