Immunohistological findings in cerebral blood vessels of 4 cases with cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) were compared with those of 4 Alzheimer's (AD) cases. A panel of antibodies against 2 neurofilament subunits (BF10 and RT97), a microtubule-associated protein (TAU) and ubiquitin were used. CAA cases showed a strong immunoreactivity for ubiquitin in blood vessel wall. Senile plaques (SPs) in CAA cases showed strong ubiquitin positivity but the central amyloid core was negative. AD brains showed immunoreactivity with all antibodies in SPs and neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs); blood vessels were consistently negative for ubiquitin. Control brains showed few SPs and NFTs; these were positive for ubiquitin, but blood vessels were negative. These results indicate that vascular amyloid deposition in CAA and AD may have different pathophysiological mechanisms.