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Peripheral nerve amyloidosis in sural nerve biopsies: a clinicopathologic analysis of 13 cases.

Rajani B,Rajani V,Prayson RA

Abstract

Amyloidosis is a well-recognized but uncommon cause of peripheral neuropathy. Our objectives were to determine the overall prevalence of peripheral nerve amyloidosis in sural nerve biopsies and to evaluate the clinical and pathologic features of these lesions.
All available histologic and ultrastructural materials on biopsy tissue from 13 cases of peripheral nerve amyloidosis were examined. Muscle biopsies performed at the same time as the nerve biopsy were reviewed when available. Clinical data were collected on all patients.
The prevalence of amyloidosis in sural nerve biopsies at our institution was 13 (1.2%) of 1098 cases over a 15.8-year period. These patients ranged in age from 41 to 82 years (median, 61 years) at initial presentation and included 10 men and 3 women. Presenting neuropathy symptoms were sensory in 6 of the 13 patients, motor in 2 cases, and mixed in 5 cases. Cardiac, renal, or gastrointestinal involvement was present in 7 of 13 cases. Two patients had myeloma and 7 had systemic autonomic symptoms. Two patients had probable familial amyloid polyneuropathy, and 1 patient demonstrated an alanine 60 point mutation. Amyloid, identified as amorphous eosinophilic extracellular deposits demonstrating apple green birefringence on Congo red stain or recognized by its characteristic fibrillar ultrastructure by electron microscopy, was identified in the endoneurium in 12 nerves, perineurium in 2 nerves, and epineurium in 9 nerves. Chronic inflammation was identified in 5 nerves. Axonal loss was recorded as mild (<25%) in 1 nerve, moderate (25% to 75%) in 8 nerves, and severe (>75%) in 4 nerves. Axonal degeneration predominated over demyelination in 8 of 10 cases that could be evaluated. Concomitant muscle biopsies contained amyloid deposits in 8 of 9 cases.
Amyloidosis is a rare (1.2% in our series) cause of peripheral neuropathy with a distinct microscopic and ultrastructural appearance. Just over half the patients in our study had visceral organ involvement and systemic autonomic symptoms. The peripheral neuropathy was associated with axonal degeneration and a moderate to severe axonal loss in the majority of cases. Amyloid deposition was present in 8 out of 9 muscle biopsies performed at the same time.

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