Cardiac amyloidosis is an under-recognized and potentially fatal cause of heart failure and other cardiovascular manifestations. It is caused by deposition of misfolded precursor proteins as fibrillary amyloid deposits in cardiac tissues. The two primary subtypes of systemic amyloidosis causing cardiac involvement are immunoglobulin light chain (AL), a plasma cell dyscrasia, and transthyretin (ATTR), itself subdivided into a hereditary subtype caused by a gene mutation of the ATTR protein, and an age-related wild type, which occurs in the absence of a gene mutation. Clinical recognition requires a high index of suspicion, inclusive of the extracardiac manifestations of both subtypes. Diagnostic workup includes screening for serum and/or R ESUM E L'amylose cardiaque est une cause sous-reconnue et potentiellement mortelle d'insuffisance cardiaque et d'autres manifestations cardiovasculaires. Elle est caus ee par le d epôt, dans les tissus cardiaques, de prot eines pr ecurseurs mal repli ees prenant la forme de fibrilles amyloïdes. On distingue deux grands sous-types d'amylose syst emique entraînant une atteinte cardiaque : l'amylose à chaînes l egères d'immunoglobulines (AL), une forme de dyscrasie plasmocytaire; et l'amylose à transthyr etine (ATTR), dont il existe un sous-type h er editaire, caus e par une mutation du gène codant pour la TTR, et un sous-type à TTR sauvage, li e au vieillissement et se produisant en l'absence de mutation g enique. La reconnaissance clinique n ecessite
The disclosure information of the authors and reviewers is available from the CCS on their guidelines library at www.ccs.ca.This statement was developed following a thorough consideration of medical literature and the best available evidence and clinical experience. It represents the consensus of a Canadian panel comprised of multidisciplinary experts on this topic with a mandate to formulate disease-specific recommendations. These recommendations are aimed to provide a reasonable and practical approach to care for specialists and allied health professionals obliged with the duty of bestowing optimal care to patients and families, and can be subject to change as scientific knowledge and technology advance and as practice patterns evolve. The statement is not intended to be a substitute for physicians using their individual judgement in managing clinical care in consultation with the patient, with appropriate regard to all the individual circumstances of the patient, diagnostic and treatment options available and available resources. Adherence to these recommendations will not necessarily produce successful outcomes in every case.
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