Familial renal amyloidosis

Familial renal amyloidosis
Classification and external resources
Specialty endocrinology
ICD-10 E85.0
ICD-9-CM 277.3
OMIM 105200
DiseasesDB 33335
eMedicine med/3379

Familial renal amyloidosis (or familial visceral amyloidosis, or hereditary amyloid nephropathy) is a form of amyloidosis primarily presenting in the kidney.[1]

It is associated with fibrinogen alpha chain,[2] apolipoprotein A1,[3] and lysozyme.[4][5]

It is also known as "Ostertag" type, after B. Ostertag, who characterized it in 1932 and 1950.[6][7]

References

  1. "Amyloid".
  2. Uemichi T, Liepnieks JJ, Gertz MA, Benson MD (September 1998). "Fibrinogen A alpha chain Leu 554: an African-American kindred with late onset renal amyloidosis". Amyloid. 5 (3): 188–92. PMID 9818055. doi:10.3109/13506129809003844.
  3. Soutar AK, Hawkins PN, Vigushin DM, et al. (August 1992). "Apolipoprotein AI mutation Arg-60 causes autosomal dominant amyloidosis". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 89 (16): 7389–93. PMC 49715Freely accessible. PMID 1502149. doi:10.1073/pnas.89.16.7389.
  4. Granel B, Serratrice J, Disdier P, et al. (March 2005). "Underdiagnosed amyloidosis: amyloidosis of lysozyme variant". Am. J. Med. 118 (3): 321–2. PMID 15745733. doi:10.1016/j.amjmed.2004.10.022.
  5. Granel B, Valleix S, Serratrice J, et al. (January 2006). "Lysozyme amyloidosis: report of 4 cases and a review of the literature". Medicine (Baltimore). 85 (1): 66–73. PMID 16523055. doi:10.1097/01.md.0000200467.51816.6d.
  6. Ostertag B. (1932). "Demonstration einer eigenartigen familiaren paraamyloidose". Zentralbl Aug Pathol. 56: 253–4.
  7. Ostertag, B. (1950). "Familiaere Amyloid-erkrankung". Z. Menschl. Vererb. Konstitutionsl. 30: 105–115.


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