• Internal medicine journal · Jun 2014

    Gastrointestinal amyloidosis in Australian indigenous patients.

    • D J Frommer, D Fernandes, G Pawar, and R Goud.
    • Department of Medicine, Alice Springs Hospital, Alice Springs, Northern Territory, Australia.
    • Intern Med J. 2014 Jun 1; 44 (6): 605609605-9.

    AbstractThis study documents the symptoms, racial distribution, pathological findings and outcomes of patients diagnosed with gastrointestinal amyloidosis in Alice Springs Hospital. In a 4 year retrospective survey. 9 patients, all indigenous, 7F/2M, had biopsy proven gastrointestinal amyloidosis. Four out of four patients tested were found to have AA amyloidosis. Presenting symptoms included diarrhoea, bloody in some, vomiting and abdominal pain. All but one had diabetes mellitus, type 2. Multiple infections were common and most patients had low serum albumin and transferrin concentrations but high serum ferritin concentrations. Five of the patients died, and the gastrointestinal symptoms of the remaining 4 remitted. Gastrointestinal amyloidosis should be included in the differential diagnosis of indigenous patients presenting with chronic diarrhoea, vomiting or abdominal pain. It carries a grave prognosis, is probably secondary to chronic infections but is potentially reversible.© 2014 The Authors; Internal Medicine Journal © 2014 Royal Australasian College of Physicians.

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