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A Man with Dyspnea and Macroglossia ELIZABETH SODA KCMC MOSHI, TANZANIA Clinical History 51yrs M who presents to KCMC with a 4 month history of easy fatigability, palpitation, dyspnea, and enlarging tongue. Also with complaints of numbness, paresthesia, and painful extremities No significant past medical history or previous hospitalizations, life long nonsmoker and drinker Physical Exam Vital signs: BP: 100/60 HR:110/m, RR: 24/m, TO:370C Gen: sick appearing, older then stated age HEENT: grossly enlarged tongue CVS: No JVD, no m/r/g Pulm: bilateral basal dullness and ↓ air entry Abd: hepatosplenomegally Skin: scaly rashes over extremities CNS: ↓ ankle and knee reflexes Laboratory Data Cr: 50 umol/L (0.5 mg/dl) Hgb: 11.1 mg/dl Serum Calcium: 7.7 mg/dl Total Serum Protein: 9.6 g/dl Urine protein: +1 Liver enzymes: wnl HIV negative SED: not elevated Imaging CXR: moderate cardiomegaly, right sided pleural effusion Echo 19mm pericardial effusion, right sided pleural effusion U/S : Echodense kidneys, hepatomegaly Skull and vertebral X-ray: normal in appearance Clinical Outcome Patient ultimately dies soon after admission for unclear reasons-likely cardiac arrest Postmortem Autopsy Ordered -Stiff rubbery heart -Pericardial Effusion -Enlarged Liver Autopsy Photo Heart Tissue Stained with Congo Red and evidence of amyloid deposition Histopathology Firm and Stiff Spleen Autopsy Photo Enlarged, stiff kidneys Autopsy Photo Congo Red Stain of the Kidneys showing amyloid deposition Histopathology Autopsy Findings Amyloid deposition seen: tongue pleura heart liver, spleen stomach kidneys skin peripheral nerves No immunohistochemistry available so unclear of what form-no signs of active infection, inflammation, no plasma cells noted Amyloid Fundamentally is the result of extracellular protein misfolding: Occurs with or as an alternative to normal physiologic folding Results in toxic, insoluble deposition of protein aggregates in the tissues 25 different types of protein precursors are known Amyloid fibrils share a common B-pleated sheet structural conformation that confers unique staining properties apple-green birefringence under a polarized light microscope with congo red stain rigid, nonbranching fibrils 7.5 to 10 nm in diameter on electron microscopy Pathogenesis Process likely similar to normal folding Except the polypeptide finds a relatively stable misfolded state This allows for increased propensity to aggregate May occur more frequently under certain conditions like increased temps or low pH Likely Occurs in Multiple Ways: Intrinsic Propensity with increase age (senile) or concentration (HD patients) of native protein to misfold Replacement of single amino acids (hereditary amyloidosis) Proteolytic remodeling of the protein precursor (AD) Classification Classified according to whether it is systemic or localized, acquired or inherited, and by clinical patterns The accepted nomenclature is AX, where A indicates amyloidosis and X represents the protein in the fibril Types of Amyloidosis Types of Amyloidosis AL The deposition of immunoglobulin light chains Can occur alone or in association with MM or Waldenstrom's macroglobulinemia Most common in the developed world AA Associated with chronic inflammation states or infections Most common in the developing world Type of Amyloidosis Dialysis Related: Deposition of beta-2-microglobulin commonly in the shoulder and wrist Heritable Amyloidoses: Ex: cardiomyopathic amyloidosis due to deposition of fibrils derived from transthyretin (also referred to as prealbumin) Senile Systemic: Deposition of transthyretin primarily in the myocardium in elderly men Organ Specific: Amyloid deposition can be isolated to a single organ, such as the skin, eye, heart, pancreas, or genitourinary tract, resulting in specific syndromes Major Clinical Manifestations Renal: usually asymptomatic proteinuria but can be frank nephrotic syndrome. Rare progression to renal failure. Cardiac: systolic or diastolic dysfunction, angina, syncope GI: hepatomegaly is most common Neuro: mixed sensory and motor peripheral neuropathy, sporadic or familial Alzheimer disease, cerebral amyloid angiopathy Major Clinical Manifestations Pulm: tracheobronchial infiltration, persistent pleural effusions, parenchymal nodules (amyloidomas), and pulmonary hypertension. Persistent pleural effusions occur in 1-2% of patients, poorer prognosis Skin: waxy thickening, easy bruising (ecchymoses), and subcutaneous nodules or plaques. MSK: macroglossia is characteristic of AL, arthropathy, bone disease, carpal tunnel Heme: most prone to bleeding Treatment Three general approaches: Interfere with precursor protein production Stabilize the native structure of the precursor protein to prevent its transition into the misfolded protein Attempt to destabilize the amyloid fibrils themselves Interfere with the Source Stabilize the Native Protein Prevent the precursor protein from transitioning into the misfolded protein Clinical trials investigating diflunisal in pts with familial transthyretin amyloidosis Binds the transthyretin protein and stabilizes it preventing the tendency to move to the beta-pleated form Destabilize the amyloid fibril This approach targets the amyloid fibril itself not just the source Attempt to reverse organ damage in a more timely manner Target components common to all amyloid fibrils Serum Amyloid P Component Glycosaminoglycan Backbone Glycosaminoglycans Thought to play an integral role in binding amyloid to the tissues 2007 NEJM DB, placebo controlled study of the possible role of eprodisate in pts with AA Amyloidosis Binds the glycosaminoglycan binding sites on the amyloid fibril Eprodisate Rate of decline in creatinine clearance was lower in pt on drug vs placebo No effect on progression to ESRD or death No effect on proteinuria Unclear role currently, possible adjuvant therapy? Prognosis Overall median survival after diagnosis is <2years in most series. Cardiac involvement is major determinant of prognosis and most common cause of death References Dember et al. Eprodisate for the Treatment of Renal Disease in AA Amyloidosis. NEJM 2007;356: 2349-2360 Rajkumar, S. Advances in the Treatment of Amyloidosis. NEJM 2007; 356: 2413-2415 Merlini G, Molecular Mechanisms of Amyloidosis. NEJM 2003;349:583-96. www.uptodate.com: An overview of amyloidosis