Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5977631 International Journal of Cardiology 2013 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundSenile systemic amyloidosis (SSA) is a common aging phenomenon in the elderly population. Nevertheless, pre-mortem diagnosis of SSA is rare. Thus, data on clinical characterization and disease severity are limited.Methods36 consecutive SSA patients (71.6 [64.7-82.7] years) were evaluated by electrocardiography, echocardiography, laboratory tests, and 99mTechnetium-3,3-diphosphono-1,2-propanodicarboxylic acid (99mTc-DPD) scintigraphy (n = 20).ResultsIn addition to cardiac involvement, amyloid deposition was found in rectum (n = 6), peripheral nerves (n = 2), and urinary bladder (n = 2). Five patients showed low voltage pattern. Thickness of interventricular septum (IVS) was 20 [12-27] mm. LV longitudinal function was diminished (TDI-s 5 [3-11] cm/s; MAPSE 6.5 [2.5-19] mm; TAPSE 12.5 [2-24] mm). LV systolic function (LV-EF < 45%) was markedly decreased in 19 patients. Plasma levels of troponin T (0.05 [0.01-0.23] µg/L) and NT-proBNP (4318 [205-16597] ng/L) were elevated. 99mTc-DPD heart retention was 7.8 [2.4-11.0]% and correlated with MAPSE (ρ = − 0.716; p = 0.0018), TAPSE (ρ = − 0.491; p < 0.05), and IVS (ρ = 0.556; p = 0.0153). Heart-to-body ratio correlated with MAPSE (ρ = − 0.771; p = 0.0018), IVS (ρ = 0.603; p = 0.0086).Twelve patients died during follow-up of 27.4 [0.1-106.2] months. Exclusively 99mTc-DPD heart retention, diastolic dysfunction and in trend MAPSE were associated with patient's outcome. Interestingly, risk predictors that were well established in patients with AL amyloidosis were not predictive for survival in patients with SSA.ConclusionsThis study gave first evidence that 99mTc-DPD HR may be capable to display the extent of cardiac amyloid deposition. Moreover, this study suggested that 99mTc-DPD HR, diastolic dysfunction and in trend MAPSE are associated with poor outcome. Nevertheless, these findings need to be established in a larger prospective trial.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Authors
, , , , , , , , , , , , ,