Amyloidosis causes: Difference between revisions

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==Causes==
==Causes==
===Systemic amyloidosis===
===Systemic Amyloidosis===
====Primary/Hereditary amyloidosis====
====Primary/Hereditary Amyloidosis====
These rare hereditary disorders are usually due to [[point mutations]] in precursor proteins, and are also usually [[autosomal dominant]]ly transmitted.The precursor proteins are;
These rare hereditary disorders are usually due to [[point mutations]] in precursor proteins, and are also usually [[autosomal dominant]]ly transmitted. The precursor proteins are:
* [[Transthyretin]]-the most commonly implicated protein.
* [[Transthyretin]]-the most commonly implicated protein.
* [[Lysozyme]]
* [[Lysozyme]]
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* [[Gelsolin]]
* [[Gelsolin]]


====Secondary amyloidosis====
====Secondary Amyloidosis====
These are far more common than the primary amyloidoses.
These are far more common than the primary amyloidoses.
* ''AL amyloidosis'' ([[immunoglobulin light chains]] are the precursor protein, overproduced in [[multiple myeloma]]).  This is sometimes, confusingly and erroneously, called 'primary amyloidosis'.
* ''AL amyloidosis'' ([[immunoglobulin light chains]] are the precursor protein, overproduced in [[multiple myeloma]]).  This is sometimes, confusingly and erroneously, called 'primary amyloidosis'.

Revision as of 13:12, 26 November 2012

Amyloidosis Microchapters

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Patient Information

Overview

Historical Perspective

Classification

Primary amyloidosis
Secondary amyloidosis
Familial amyloidosis
Wild-type (senile) amyloidosis
Cardiac amyloidosis
Beta-2 microglobulin related amyloidosis
Gelsolin related amyloidosis
Lysozyme amyloid related amyloidosis
Leucocyte cell-derived chemotaxin 2 related amyloidosis
Fibrinogen A alpha-chain associated amyloidosis

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

Overview

Amyloidosis can be systemic or organ specific. In systemic amyloidosis, the secondary form (AL, AA) is much more common than the primary form.

Causes

Systemic Amyloidosis

Primary/Hereditary Amyloidosis

These rare hereditary disorders are usually due to point mutations in precursor proteins, and are also usually autosomal dominantly transmitted. The precursor proteins are:

Secondary Amyloidosis

These are far more common than the primary amyloidoses.

Organ-specific amyloidosis

In almost all of the organ-specific pathologies, there is significant debate as to whether the amyloid plaques are the causal agent of the disease or instead a downstream consequence of a common idiopathic agent. The associated proteins are indicated in parentheses.

Neurological amyloid

Cardiovascular amyloid

Other

References

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