Types of Amyloidosis
Pathophysiology
Nephrotic Syndrome Amyloidosis
Clinical Presentation
Amyloidosis Imaging
100

This form of systemic amyloidosis arises from misfolded monoclonal light chains, most often λ, produced by a plasma-cell dyscrasia

What is AL (light-chain) amyloidosis?

100

This classically describes the shared secondary structure of amyloid fibrils, characterized by stacked peptide strands stabilized by intermolecular hydrogen bonds.

What is a β-pleated sheet?

100

This organ, aside from the kidney, is most frequently involved in AL amyloidosis and is the leading cause of mortality in affected patients.

What is the heart?

100

This classic renal manifestation of amyloidosis is defined by heavy proteinuria, hypoalbuminemia, and edema

What is nephrotic syndrome?

100

This special stain, when viewed under polarized light, reveals the pathognomonic apple-green birefringence of amyloid deposits in renal tissue

What is Congo red staining?

200

This type results from serum amyloid A deposition and classically occurs in chronic inflammatory conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis or IBD

What is AA (secondary) amyloidosis?

200

In AL amyloidosis, this type of protein produced by a clonal plasma cell population is the precursor to amyloid fibrils that deposit in the kidney.

What are immunoglobulin light chains?

200

This diagnostic blood test is essential for detecting a monoclonal protein and raising suspicion for AL amyloidosis

What is serum protein electrophoresis (looking for an M-spike)?

200

 In amyloidosis-related nephrotic syndrome, this laboratory finding is typically present despite bland urinary sediment and absence of casts.

What is massive proteinuria?

200

On light microscopy, amyloid deposits in the glomeruli typically appear as this type of material, which is acellular and periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) pale

What is amorphous, eosinophilic, acellular material?

300

This hereditary amyloidosis subtype is caused by mutations in transthyretin, destabilizing its tetrameric structure and promoting fibril formation.

What is acute transthyretin (ATTR) (familial) amyloidosis?


300

The loss of this glomerular barrier property, due to amyloid infiltration, leads to the hallmark feature of nephrotic syndrome: massive proteinuria

What is increased glomerular permeability (charge loss)?

300

This protein, when mutated, is responsible for most hereditary forms of systemic amyloidosis with cardiac and neurologic involvement

What is transthyretin (TTR)

300

Unlike other causes of nephrotic syndrome, this blood pressure abnormality is uncommon in renal amyloidosis, even with advanced renal dysfunction

What is systemic hypertension?

300

Electron microscopy of renal amyloidosis demonstrates these randomly arranged structures, measuring 7–12 nm in diameter

What are non-branching amyloid fibrils?

400

This form of age-related amyloidosis involves deposition of wild-type transthyretin, often presenting with restrictive cardiomyopathy in older adults

What is wild-type transthyretin (ATTR) (senile systemic) amyloidosis?

400

In AA amyloidosis, chronic inflammation drives overproduction of this acute-phase reactant, which serves as the precursor for amyloid fibrils

What is serum amyloid A protein?

400

This FDA-approved therapy targets the underlying plasma cell clone in AL amyloidosis and is also used in multiple myeloma

What is daratumumab?

400

This physical sign, resulting from profound hypoalbuminemia, is a frequent presenting symptom in patients with nephrotic syndrome due to amyloidosis

What is peripheral edema?

400

Immunofluorescence in AL (light chain) amyloidosis often shows this pattern of staining for immunoglobulin light chains.

What is monoclonal (kappa or lambda) light chains?

500

This localized endocrine amyloidosis arises from amylin (islet amyloid polypeptide) accumulation and is associated with β-cell dysfunction

What is islet amyloidosis in type 2 diabetes mellitus?

500

The buildup of proteins in various organ systems (heart, liver, kidneys, etc).

What is amyloidosis?

500

Tubulointerstitial amyloid deposition can produce this concentrating defect, leading to polyuria and nocturia.

What is nephrogenic diabetes insipidus?

500

In renal amyloidosis, progression to this stage of kidney disease occurs in up to 30–40% of patients over the disease course

What is end-stage kidney disease (ESKD)?

500

In renal amyloidosis, immunofluorescence of the glomerulus may be characterized by this finding if there is no light chain deposition.

What is negative immunofluorescence?

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