The true population and diversity of ATTR cardiac amyloidosis revealed by new diagnostic tools Cardiac amyloidosis is a hypertrophic cardiac disease in which diastolic heart failure, conduction disorder, atrial fibrillation, and lethal arrhythmia are caused by accumulation of amyloid fibrils at the interstitial space of the heart. Although this disorder is one of the well-known secondary cardiomyopathies, it is guessed that individual physicians have not experienced many diagnoses, especially identification of a type of amyloidosis in detail. The reasons why its diagnosis is difficult are that, in addition to the rare occurrence of this disease, it is not well recognized as one of the important causes of unexplained cardiac hypertrophy, that myocardial biopsy is believed to be essential for diagnosis, and that medical testing has not constructively been done because there is no effective treatment.Although over 30 types of amyloid precursor proteins have been identified, systemic amyloidosis leading to cardiac involvement is mainly of monoclonal light chain, variant type transthyretin (ATTRh), and wild-type ATTR (ATTRwt). The prognosis and treatment strategies are distinct for each of these 3 types of amyloidosis, but there had been no cure for the underlying disease for the ATTRwt. The successful results of ATTR-ACT clinical trial, the phase III trial which investigated the efficacy and safety of tafamidis for ATTR cardiac amyloidosis [1], were announced in 2018, and the disease has been attracting attention in Japan and other countries.99m Technetium (Tc)-pyrophosphate (PYP) scintigraphy is