Amyloidosis is a generic term referring to a group of diseases characterised by extracellular deposition of amyloid material in various organs, either in isolation or generalised. Amyloid deposition at the cardiac level may be the first manifestation of the disease. The presentation is usually left ventricular hypertrophy, so patients may initially be diagnosed as having hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Patients may also present with signs of peripheral neuropathy. Pathogenic variants of the TTR gene lead to abnormal deposition of amyloid transthyretin (TTR) fibrils in peripheral nerve fibres. This process gradually damages the peripheral nervous system, causing symptoms such as muscle weakness, loss of sensitivity, pain and other neurological problems.
1 gene
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Molecular analysis of the gene associated with familial amyloidosis (TTR).
Method:Sanger sequencing
Limits: The test is unable to determine the presence of underrepresented somatic events, balanced chromosomal rearrangements, nucleotide expansion events of repeat regions, CNVs <3 contiguous exons.
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