Amyloidosis can be defined as an extracellular deposit of the amyloid fibrillar protein in one or more locations in the organism. Multiple clinical and biochemical forms of amyloid exist, and are characterized according to their fibrillar structural characteristics. The Red Congo stain presents green fluorescence when histologic cuts are observed by polarized light. The deposits of this substance can be focal in nearly any area of the organism, although the perivascular space tends to be affected. We present the case of a woman operated on for myeloma at the base of the cranium who showed no wider affectation at a later study. Fourteen years after the operation the patient showed a progressive growth of the submandibular gland that was diagnosed as a pathological amyloid deposit.
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Med Oral
September 2003
Servicio de Cirugia Oral y Maxilofacial, Hospital Universitario Virgen del Rocio, Sevilla, Spain.
Amyloidosis can be defined as an extracellular deposit of the amyloid fibrillar protein in one or more locations in the organism. Multiple clinical and biochemical forms of amyloid exist, and are characterized according to their fibrillar structural characteristics. The Red Congo stain presents green fluorescence when histologic cuts are observed by polarized light.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe patient is an obese, 55-year-old woman. She noticed purpura at several sites when she was 49 years old. She visited our clinic with a chief complaint of exertional dyspnea at 51 years of age.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 73-year-old patient complained of increasing macroglossia and symmetrical enlargement of the submandibular region. A tongue biopsy showed typical deposits of amyloid by Congo red staining and polarization microscopy. Similar deposits were found in biopsy specimens of the submaxillary gland and the rectum.
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