Amyloid in Urinary Sediments as a Diagnostic Technique
- JOSHUA SHEMER, M.D.;
- GLENDA YAEL MESSER, Ph.D.;
- MORDECHAI PRAS, M.D.; and
- JOSEPH GAFNI, M.D.
- Chaim Sheba Medical Center at Tel-Hashomer and Tel-Aviv University School of Medicine; Tel-Aviv, Israel
Excerpt
Three separate reports describing the detection of amyloid fibrils in urinary sediment, each in a single amyloidotic patient, suggested a noninvasive technique for the diagnosis of amyloidosis (1-3). Others, however, have reported amyloid fibrils in nonamyloidotic nephrotic patients and normal persons as well (4).
To evaluate the diagnostic usefulness of the occurrence of amyloid in the urine, we screened the urines of 20 proteinuric amyloidotic patients and, as control subjects, 10 nonamyloidotic nephrotic patients.
Five hundred-millilitre morning urine specimens were centrifuged in a Sorval superspeed RC-2-B refrigerated centrifuge (Sorval, Newtown, Connecticut) at 15 000 g for 1 h. The sediment
This 100-word excerpt has been provided in the absence of an abstract.
Article and Author Information
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This research was supported by a grant from the United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation, Jerusalem, Israel
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