Amyloidosis Flashcards
Define amyloidosis?
heterogenous group of disease characterised by extracellular deposition of amyloid fibrils
deposition may be localised or part of systemic deposition
what are the risk factors for amyloidosis?
- inflammatory arthropathy
- chronic infections eg bronchiectasis
- IBD especialy crohns
summarise the epidemiology of amyloidosis?
AA - incidence of 1-5% amongst patients with chronic inflammatory diseases
AL - 300-600 cases in the UK per year
Hereditary Amyloidosis - accounts for 5% of patients with amyloidosis
outline the aetiology of amyloidosis?
Amyloid fibrils are polymers of low-molecular-weight subunit proteins
Derived from proteins that undergo conformational changes to adopt an anti-parallel beta-pleated sheet configuration
Their deposition progressively disrupts the structure and function of normal tissue
Amyloidosis can be systemic (generalised) or localised, e.g. in pancreatic islets of Langerhans (T2DM), cerebral cortex (Alzheimer’s), cerebral blood vessels (amyloid angiopathy), and in bones and joints.
what are the 3 types of amyloidosis?
Type AA - serum amyloid A protein
Type AL - monoclonal immunoglobulin lightchains
Type ATTR (familial amyloid polyneuropathy)- genetic-variant transthyretin
how is amyloidosis classified?
according to fibril subunit proteins
describe type AL amyloidosis?
monoclonal immunoglobulin lightchains
Also known as primary amyloidosis
Affects kidneys, heart, nerves, gut, vascular
describe type AA amyloidosis?
serum amyloid A protein
Also known as secondary amyloidosis (reactive systemic amyloidosis)- depos in chronic inflam conditions such as Crohn’s
Affects kidneys, liver and spleen
Describe type ATTR amyloidosis?
Type ATTR (familial amyloid polyneuropathy)- genetic-variant transthyretin
Also known as familial amyloidosis
Usually causes a sensory or autonomic neuropathy +/- renal or cardiac involvement
what are the presenting symptoms and signs of amyloidosis?
Renal - proteinuria, nephrotic syndrome (=>oedema), renal failure
Cardiac - restrictive cardiomyopathy, heart failure, arrhythmia, angina, JVP raised=> fatigue + weight loss + dyspnoea, claudication
GI - macroglossia(characteristic of AL – most specific finding), hepatosplenomegaly, gut dysmotility, malabsorption, bleeding=>N, abdo cramps, altered bowel motility
Neurological - sensory and motor neuropathy, autonomic neuropathy, carpal tunnel syndrome => paraesthesia, tinel’s and phalen’s sign
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 are the appropriate investigations for amyloidosis and interpret the results?
Urine - check for proteinuria, free immunoglobulin light chains (in AL)
Bloods
- CRP/ESR
- Rheumatoid factor
- Immunoglobulin levels – presence of monoclonal protein
- Serum protein electrophoresis
- LFTs
- U&Es
Bone Marrow Biopsy – clonal plasma cells seen
Apple green birefringence under polarised light with Congo red stain
what investigations would you consider for amyloidosis?
- Tissue Biopsy – to diagnose amyloidosis and identify amyloid fibril protein
- Mass-spec to confirm protein type of amyloid proteins
- Genetic testing – to see if familial cause of amyloidosis
- SAP Scan - radiolabelled SAP will localise the deposits of amyloid
- ECG – to see extent of cardiac involvement
- Echo – to see extent of cardiac involvement