A case report of localized gastric amyloidosis.

World J Gastroenterol

Department of General Surgery, Second Affiliated Hospital, Medical College of Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310009, Zhejiang Province, China.

Published: November 2003

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates a rare case of localized gastric amyloidosis, highlighting its clinical and lab characteristics through a detailed report and literature review.
  • The patient initially presented with nonspecific symptoms and was misdiagnosed as having a gastric malignancy based on imaging, but a biopsy confirmed amyloid deposits without cancer.
  • The findings emphasize the importance of biopsy for accurate diagnosis and suggest that surgical removal of affected tissue is an effective treatment, although monitoring for recurrence is advised due to the disease's potential for recurrence.

Article Abstract

Aim: To elucidate the clinical and laboratory features of localized gastric amyloidosis via a rare report along with a review of related literatures.

Methods: The clinical manifestations, laboratory results and surgical treatment of a female patient with localized gastric amyloidosis in our hospital were summarized. The relevant literatures were reviewed on the etiology, clinical features, diagnosis, treatment and prognosis of this disease.

Results: The patient was lack of specific clinical manifestations and positive laboratory results. Prior to the treatment, she was suspected to be of malignization from gastric ulcer by both gastroscopy and endoscopic ultrasonography, which was denied by the gastric biopsy. The patient was treated with subtotal gastrectomy and clearance of perigastric lymph nodes. The postoperative pathological diagnosis determined the lesion to be the deposition of amyloid materials in the gastric mucosa, submucosa and blood vessel walls with intestinal metaplasia and atrophy of the gastric glands, in which no malignant tumor was found. Congo red staining with prior potassium permanganate incubation confirmed the AA type of amyloid in this case. Multiple biopsies from esophagus, remnant stomach, duodenum, colon and bone marrow in the follow-up survey showed no amyloidal deposition in these tissues and organs. Up to the present, no signs of recurrence have been found in this patient.

Conclusion: Localized gastric amyloidosis, being rare in incidence, should be considered in the differentiation of gastric tumors, in which biopsy is the only means to confirm the diagnosis. Currently, surgical resection of pathological tissue and circumambient lymph nodes may be a preferable therapeutic strategy for the localized amyloidosis to prevent possible complications. Although with a benign prognosis, gastric amyloidosis possesses a recurrent tendency as suggested by the literatures.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4656558PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3748/wjg.v9.i11.2632DOI Listing

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