Cases reported "Amyloid Neuropathies"

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1/3. Familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy (ATTR Val30Met) with widespread cerebral amyloid angiopathy and lethal cerebral hemorrhage.

    We report an autopsy case of familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy (FAP) with cerebral hemorrhage. A 38-year-old woman with a typical FAP pedigree started developing severe diarrhea and sensori-motor polyneuropathy at the age of 28 years; autonomic nervous system, heart and renal dysfunction manifested themselves in the following years. Genetic analysis revealed a single amino acid substitution at codon 30 of transthyretin (ATTR Val30Met). Ten years after her initial symptoms, the patient died of a sudden convulsive attack and respiratory failure. autopsy revealed lethal cerebral hemorrhages and uremic lungs. Histochemical and immunohistochemical analyses revealed TTR-derived amyloid protein in every tissue examined, particularly in glomeruli and peripheral vessels. Severe meningo-cerebrovascular amyloidosis was also detected. Because uremia causes oxidative damage to the vascular system and amyloid formation is closely associated with oxidative stress, it is possible that uremic endothelial damage facilitated an unusual cerebral amyloid deposition. In typical FAP (ATTR Val30Met), cerebral amyloid angiopathy does not usually have clinical manifestations. However, cerebral amyloid angiopathy should be considered to explain FAP symptoms when some risk factors such as uremic vascular damage are accompanying features.
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2/3. Amyloidomas of the nervous system: a monoclonal B-cell disorder with monotypic amyloid light chain lambda amyloid production.

    BACKGROUND. Amyloidomas or localized tumor-like amyloid deposits rarely affect the nervous system. To the authors' knowledge, no comprehensive studies on central and peripheral nervous system amyloidomas have been published. The amyloid subtype of amyloidomas of the nervous system only recently was characterized and almost invariably was found to be of amyloid light chain (AL) lambda type. The nature of the plasma cell population responsible for AL amyloid production has not been investigated further. methods. The current analysis included the clinical findings, neuroimaging characteristics, and pathology of seven amyloidomas (four cerebral and three involving peripheral nerves). All were subjected to histochemical staining (congo red, thioflavine S) and to immunohistochemical study using primary antibodies detecting serum amyloid component P, serum amyloid protein A (SAA), transthyretin, beta2 microglobulin (beta2m), and free immunoglobulin (Ig) light chain. For the detection of mRNA of light chain Ig, fluorescein-conjugated kappa and lambda mRNA oligonucleotide probes were used. For the assessment of B-cell clonality, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was applied on extracted dna from two cases using VH FRIII and JH primers. Two cases were assessed ultrastructurally. RESULTS. All amyloidomas were organ restricted and unrelated to systemic amyloidosis. The clinical symptoms of the cerebral lesions were nonspecific, whereas neurologic deficits were noted in the distribution of the involved peripheral nerves. Cerebral deposits, either solitary or multiple, were associated spatially with the choroid plexus and secondarily extended into white matter. All peripheral nerve amyloidomas involved the gasserian ganglion of the trigeminal nerve. Imaging by computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging scans revealed hyperdense and contrast-enhancing mass lesions unassociated with significant edema. Immunohistochemically, the amyloid was present in the interstitium and within the walls of the intralesional vessels, was invariably of AL lambda subtype, and was negative for free Ig kappa light chains, SAA, transthyretin, and beta2m. plasma cells along the perivascular sheaths and occasionally squeezed between amyloid masses showed no cytologic atypia. in situ hybridization for Ig light chain mRNA reflected a massive preponderance of lambda-producing cells. PCR revealed monoclonal rearrangement of the heavy chain Ig gene. CONCLUSIONS. The results of the current study provide strong support for the concept that amyloidomas of the nervous system are neoplasms of an AL lambda-producing B-cell clone capable of terminal differentiation. Nevertheless, all seven patients lacked clinical evidence of an aggressive or systemic lymphoplasmacytic neoplasm. Unlike plasmacytomas, the relatively indolent course of most nervous system amyloidomas is reminiscent of the similarly indolent biologic behavior of extranodal, low grade B-cell lymphoma of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) type.
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3/3. Familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy type I with extracellular superoxide dismutase mutation: a case report.

    We report an autopsy case of familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy (FAP) Type I with mutations in both transthyretin (TTR) and extracellular superoxide dismutase (EC-SOD). This patient started to develop peripheral neuropathy at age 25, followed by cardiac, renal, and autonomic nervous system failure due to massive amyloid deposition. Thirteen years after the initial symptoms, he died of septic shock. autopsy revealed suppurative peritonitis, multiple abscesses in the bile ducts and urinary tract, and more marked amyloid deposition than commonly seen in FAP. Amyloid deposition occurred in various organs and tissues, especially prominently around blood vessels and in interstitial tissues, and was demonstrated immunohistochemically to be composed of TTR but not amyloid A (AA) and not amyloid L (AL) proteins. The serum EC-SOD content of the patient was 10 fold higher than those seen often in other FAP patients and in healthy controls. Genetic analysis demonstrated the single amino acid substitutions in Val30Met TIR and Arg213Gly EC-SOD. Since these data suggest the dissociation of EC-SOD from the vascular wall, massive amyloid deposition in the present case may be related to increased oxidative stress in loco.
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