BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:The hypothesis that MS could be provoked by a derangement of the blood outflow from the brain has been largely discredited. In part, it was because data on the normal pattern of outflow are scarce and obtained with different methods. The aim of this study was to evaluate the normal pattern of outflow for the vertebral and internal jugular veins in healthy subjects with multigate color Doppler.
Amyloidosis comprises a unique group of diseases that share in common the extracellular deposition of insoluble fibrillar proteins in organs and tissue including the heart. Cardiac amyloidosis could be primary a part of systemic acquired amyloidosis, or a result of heredofamilial amyloidosis. Although the infiltration of the heart from different types of amyloid results in restrictive cardiomyopathy that manifests with refractory congestive heart failure and conduction abnormalities, unequivocal identification of the deposited amyloidogenic protein is mandatory in order to avoid misdiagnosis and inappropriate treatment. Recent developments in imaging techniques and extracardiac tissue biopsy have minimized the need for invasive endomyocardial biopsy for amyloidosis. Despite advances in treatment, the prognosis of a patient with amyloidosis is still poor and depends upon the underlying disease, and the type and degree of dysfunction of the involved organs. Thus, early diagnosis is mandatory because patients with advanced disease are usually too ill for intensive therapy. This review outlines current approaches to diagnosis, assessment of disease severity, and treatment of cardiac amyloidosis.
Amyloidogenic light-chain-derived fibrils induce more severe myocardial dysfunction in light-chain amyloidosis than in ATTR, despite similar myocardial infiltration. Thus, the degree of cardiac dysfunction may be related not only to the amount of amyloid deposited, but also to qualitative differences among fibrils.
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