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SINCE Cohen's review of amyloidosis was published in the Journal in 1967, there have been major advances in our understanding of what was less than a decade ago an untreatable, usually lethal disease complex of unknown nature, cause, and pathogenesis. Much of the mystery about the character of the "waxy, eosinophilic" tissue deposits, which Virchow believed in 1853 to be of polysaccharide composition and consequently designated as "amyloid" (starch-like or cellulose-like) has now yielded to investigations employing a wide variety of chemical and physical techniques. Once it was demonstrated that unique fibrillar components comprised over 90 per cent of amyloid . . .
George G. Glenner (Thu,) studied this question.