Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy was performed in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) during the period 1989-1991, and biopsy specimens were obtained from the stomach and from the duodenum for examining amyloid deposits. Among 407 patients, gastrointestinal amyloidosis was confirmed in 54 (13.3%). Twenty-two patients were regarded as having slight amyloid deposits, while 32 patients were categorized as having marked amyloid deposits. The incidence of clinical manifestations suggestive of systemic amyloidosis was more frequent in the marked deposits group than in the slight deposits group (47% vs 14%, P<0.05). Among the patients who died of manifestations associated with amyloidosis, the survival period following endoscopy was shorter in the marked deposits group than in the slight deposits group. These findings suggest that gastroduodenal biopsies may be useful for diagnosing secondary amyloidosis and that the degree of amyloid deposits seems to be correlated with the clinical manifestations of RA.
Four 99mTc-labeled chalcone derivatives and their corresponding rhenium analogues were tested as potential probes for imaging β-amyloid plaques. The chalcones showed higher affinity for Aβ(1-42) aggregates than did 99m Tc complexes. In sections of brain tissue from an animal model of AD, the four Re chalcones intensely stained β-amyloid plaques. In biodistribution experiments using normal mice,
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