| Literature DB >> 25159190 |
Liv Østevik1, Gjermund Gunnes, Gustavo A de Souza, Tale N Wien, Randi Sørby.
Abstract
Localized nasal, conjunctival and corneal amyloidosis was diagnosed in a 15-year-old pony with nasal and conjunctival masses and severe dyspnoea. Multiple swellings had been evident in the nostrils for at least two years and had gradually increased in size before presentation due to dyspnoea and exercise intolerance. Surgical debulking of the masses was performed and histological examination revealed large amounts of extracellular, hyaline, eosinophilic, Congo red positive material in the lamina propria of the nasal mucosa. A tentative diagnosis of localized nasal amyloidosis was made. The treatment relieved the clinical signs, however, the nasal masses recurred and bilateral conjunctival, papillary masses developed. The horse was euthanized. Nodular nasal and papillary conjunctival masses consisting of rubbery, grey to yellow tissue were found at necropsy. At the limbus this tissue infiltrated and expanded the cornea. The masses consisted of amyloid and moderate infiltrates of T lymphocytes and B lymphocytes were present in the tissue. No predominance of either cell type was observed and no distinct neoplastic mass could be identified. Ultrastructural examination of the nasal mucosa and cornea confirmed the presence of abundant extracellular deposits of non-branching fibrils ranging from 9-11 nm in diameter consistent with amyloid. Immunohistochemistry of amyloid revealed no labelling for AA amyloid, and no peptides representing serum amyloid A (SAA) were detected by microscopic laser dissection and subsequent mass spectrometry. Peptides from immunoglobulin kappa-like light chains were detected and are suggestive of AL amyloidosis, however the results were inconclusive and a final identification of the amyloid protein could not be made.Nasal amyloidosis is a clinical entity of localized amyloid deposits in the horse. Localized amyloidosis involving the conjunctiva of the horse is previously described in only seven cases and the present case is the first case of combined, localized nasal and corneal amyloidosis in the horse. In several reported cases surgical excision has provided clinical improvement and return to normal levels of exercise, while medical treatment has had no effect. The present case however, shows that rapid recurrence and progression of nasal amyloidosis to involve ocular tissues can occur and lead to recurrent respiratory obstruction.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25159190 PMCID: PMC4223893 DOI: 10.1186/s13028-014-0050-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Vet Scand ISSN: 0044-605X Impact factor: 1.695
Figure 1Amyloid masses in the right rostral nasal cavity. Nodular to diffuse thickening of the nasal mucosa at the mucocutaneous junction were observed (arrows). The proliferative tissue was rubbery, yellow to white and poorly demarcated from the surrounding nasal mucosa.
Figure 2Multiple papillary projections are present in the conjunctiva. Irregular, papillary proliferations of the ocular conjunctiva were evident.
Figure 3Microscopic image of the conjunctiva. Multifocal to coalescing aggregates of a hyaline, eosinophilic material were present in the lamina propria of the conjunctiva (arrowheads). The papillary structures consisted of lamina propria covered by hyperplastic, irregular epithelium. Multifocal, mild to marked, subepithelial and perivascular infiltrates of plasma cells and lymphocytes (arrows) occasionally forming large nodular aggregates (*) were present in the lamina propria. Haematoxylin and eosin stain; bar 100 μm.
Figure 4Amyloid deposits and inflammatory infiltrates in the cornea. Multifocal clusters of multinucleated giant cells (arrows), macrophages, lymphocytes and plasma cells surrounded the deposits in the cornea (*). Macrophages and giant cells appeared to have phagocytised amyloid (arrowheads). Corneal neovascularisation was also evident. Haematoxylin and eosin stain; bar 20 μm.
Figure 5Nasal amyloid display apple green birefringence in polarized light. Multifocal to coalescing aggregates of hyaline, eosinophilic material in the lamina propria of the nasal mucocutaneous junction were observed perivascularly (arrow) and in a narrow subepithelial zone (arrowheads). The hyaline, eosinophilic material stained positive with Congo red and displayed apple green birefringence in polarized light. The collagen fibres of the lamina propria show white birefringence. Congo red stain; bar 100 μm.
Figure 6Transmission electron microscopy the cornea revealed abundant amyloid deposits. Surrounding a corneal blood vessel (arrow) was perivascular, extracellular non-branching fibrils (*). The fibrils ranged from 9–11 nm in diameter consistent with amyloid. Inset shows fibrils at high magnification. Bar 5 μm, inset; bar 500 nm.
Reported equine cases of localized nasal and ocular amyloidosis
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| 1987 | Shaw | 4 | Unknown. Presumed AA | PS | 4 | 1 | 1 case pharynx | Dyspnoea, reduced performance, respiratory stertor | T: Topical and systemic cortisone - no effect, then surgical excision, | ||
| O: Returned to former use, no recurrence for 1 year | |||||||||||
| 1988 | Nappert | 2 | Unknown. Presumed AL | PS | 2 | Dyspnoea, epistaxis | T: Topical cortisone, | ||||
| O: No effect - euthanasia - one case. One case: NR | |||||||||||
| 1988 | Van Andel | 6 | AL | PS, IHC* Case 1WB AAS WB, AAS | 6 | 1 | Case 1- nodules subcutaneously, within fasciae and muscle, superficial lymph nodes, oesophagus, synovium, ileocaceal valve, thoracic cavity | Dyspnoea, stertor, epistaxis, wasting | Case 1: Histolymphocytic lymphosarcoma | T: Case 1; none, | |
| O: Euthanasia, Case 1,Case 2–6: NR | |||||||||||
| 1989 | Linke and Trautwein [ | 2 | AL | IHC | 2 | Dyspnoea | T: Surgical excision | ||||
| O: NR | |||||||||||
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| 1994 | Kasper | 2 | Unknown, Presumed AL (1) AA (1) | PS | 2 | Dyspnoea, nasal discharge, respiratory stertor, episodic epistaxis | T: 1 case surgical excision, 1 case N, | ||||
| O: Improvement of clinical symptoms, no recurrence 12 month follow up | |||||||||||
| 2012 | Portela | 1 | Unknown | ND | 1 | Epistaxis | T: Surgical excision, | ||||
| O: Stable, but not in training | |||||||||||
| 2012 | Axiak and Johnson [ | 1 | Unknown | ND | 2 | Exercise intolerance | NR | T: 1 case surgical excision, 1 case NR, | |||
| O: Improvement of clinical symptoms, unknown follow-up | |||||||||||
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Cases of localized ocular and combined nasal and ocular (conjunctival) amyloidosis are in bold. Cases of ERU, in which the hallmark lesion is ciliary body amyloid deposits, are not included. PS - Potassium permanganate sensitivity, IHC - immunohistochemistry for AL amyloid, IHC*- immunohistochemistry for amyloid A amyloid, WB - western blot, ND - not done, AAS - amino acid sequencing, NR - not reported. #Amyloid from case 1 in the paper by van Andel et al. [14] is further characterized by Niewold et al. [17] and this case is therefore not included as separate case in this table.