Amyloidosis Flashcards
Define amyloidosis
• Heterogenous group of diseases characterised by extracellular deposition of amyloid fibrils
What are the causes/risk factors of amyloidosis?
- monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS)
- inflammatory polyarthropathy
- chronic infections
- inflammatory bowel disease
- familial periodic fever syndromes
- Castleman’s disease
What are the types of amyloidosis?
Amyloidosis is classified according to the fibril subunit proteins
- Type AA - serum amyloid A protein
- Type AL - monoclonal immunoglobulin light chains
- Type ATTR (familial amyloid polyneuropathy) - genetic-variant transthyretin
What are the signs and symptoms of amyloidosis?
Renal
• proteinuria
• nephrotic syndrome
• renal failure
Cardiac • restrictive cardiomyopathy • heart failure • arrhythmia • angina
GI • macroglossia (characteristic of AL) • hepatosplenomegaly • gut dysmotility • malabsorption • bleeding
Neurological
• sensory and motor neuropathy
• autonomic neuropathy
• carpal tunnel syndrome
Skin
• waxy skin and easy bruising
• purpura around the eyes (characteristic of AL)
• plaques and nodules
Joints
• painful asymmetrical large joints
• enlargement of anterior shoulder
Haematological
• bleeding tendency
What investigations are carried out for amyloidosis?
• Serum and urine immunofixation - presence of monoclonal protein
• Tissue Biopsy - positive green birefringence when stained with Congo red
• Urine - check for proteinuria, free immunoglobulin light chains (in AL) - abnormal kappa to lambda ratio
• Bloods
- CRP/ESR
- Rheumatoid factor
- Immunoglobulin levels
- Serum protein electrophoresis
- LFTs
- U&Es
• SAP Scan - radiolabelled SAP will localise the deposits of amyloid
• Bone marrow biopsy - clonal plasma cells