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Amyloid Myopathy:An Underdiagnosed Entity
Ann Neurol 43:719-728, Spuler,S.,et al, 1999
See this aricle in Pubmed

Article Abstract
Amyloidosis can involve multiple organs, including kidney, heart, peripheral nerve, skin, joints, and skeletal muscle, but rarely presents as a myopathy. We studied 13 adults with muscle weakness for between 3 months and 4 years in whom the diagnosis of systemic amyloidosis was unsuspected before or until just before the time of the muscle biopsy. All muscle specimens demonstrated congophilic deposits around blood vessels and muscle fibers, some necrotic and regenerating fibers, and signs of mild denervation. Immunostains in 10 patients revealed immunoglobulin amyloidosis in 7 and gelsolin amyloidosis in 1. Apolipoprotein E co-localized with the congophilic deposits in all 10, and a C-terminal epitope of the Beta-amyloid precursor protei n was detected in 6. The frequency of the diagnosis of amyloid myopathy increased 10-fold when we adopted the fluorescent Congo red stain as a routine procedure in assessing muscle biopsy specimens.
 
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amyloidosis
Congo red stain
creatine phosphokinase(CPK)elevated
diarrhea
immunoelectrophoresis,serum
muscle biopsy
muscle pain
muscle stiffness
muscle weakness
myopathy
myopathy,amyloid
myopathy,necrotizing
old age,neurology of
tongue,enlarged

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