This article is available to subscribers. Subscribe now. Already have an account? Sign in

Original ArticleFree PreviewArchive

Senile Cardiac Amyloidosis with Myocardial Dysfunction

List of authors.
  • Lyle J. Olson, M.D.,
  • Morie A. Gertz, M.D.,
  • William D. Edwards, M.D.,
  • Chin-Yang Li, M.D.,
  • Patricia A. Pellikka, M.D.,
  • David R. Holmes, Jr., M.D.,
  • A.Jamil Tajik, M.D.,
  • and Robert A. Kyle, M.D.

Abstract

Senile cardiac amyloid discovered at autopsy is usually regarded as an incidental finding. However, in immunohistochemical studies of autopsy material, three distinct forms of senile cardiovascular amyloid have been characterized, including a systemic form that diffusely infiltrates the cardiac ventricles. The systemic form can be identified immunohistochemically with use of antiserum to human prealbumin. We diagnosed senile systemic amyloidosis causing cardiac dysfunction in five men (57 to 72 years old) by using antiserum to prealbumin in myocardial biopsy tissue. Clinically, the five patients were indistinguishable from patients with nonsecretory immunoglobulin-derived primary amyloidosis with cardiac involvement; only immunohistochemical staining of myocardial tissue distinguished between the two entities. This distinction is important, because the treatment and prognosis of the two disorders are different. We recommend immunohistochemical staining of myocardial tissue for prealbumin in patients with biopsy-proved cardiac amyloid in whom no monoclonal immunoglobulin light chain is detectable in the serum or urine. (N Engl J Med 1987; 317:738–42.)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported in part by the Quade Fund.

Author Affiliations

From the Dysproteinemia Clinic, Division of Hematology and Internal Medicine, the Section of Medical Pathology, and the Division of Cardiovascular Diseases and Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation, Rochester, Minn. Address reprint requests to Dr. Gertz at the Division of Hematology and Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905.

Print Subscriber? Activate your online access.