Fibril in senile systemic amyloidosis is derived from normal transthyretin (prealbumin/primary
ABSTRACTThe amyloid fibril in senile systemic amyloidosis (SSA), like that of familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy, is derived from transthyretin (TTR). SSA, however, is a common disease, affecting to some degree 25% of the population >80 years old. In familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy, the amyloidogenesis has been considered to depend on point mutations leading to TTR variants. We show that the TTR molecule in SSA, on the other hand, has a normal primary structure. Factors other than the primary structure of TTR must therefore be important in the pathogenesis of TTRderived amyloid.
Flow cytometric reticulocyte quantification with thiazole orange (TO) was used to study erythropoiesis in 20 patients following autologous bone marrow transplantation for the treatment of acute myelogenous leukemia. Flow cytometric reticulocyte analysis provided not only the reticulocyte percentage and absolute reticulocyte count but a quantitative reticulocyte maturity index (RMI) proportional to the amount of RNA in the reticulocytes. The RMI values, but not the reticulocyte percentage or absolute counts, correlated temporally with the rise in the absolute neutrophil counts in the posttransplantation period. In the majority of patients (12/20), the RMI value was the earliest indicator of bone marrow engraftment. The findings of this study demonstrate an important clinical utility of TO reticulocyte analysis by flow cytometry and indicate the diagnostic importance of the RMI measurement in the evaluation of erythropoietic activity in bone marrow transplant patients.
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