Results 311 to 320 of about 299,603 (337)
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Drug allergy

Medical Clinics of North America, 1992
Although allergic drug reactions are just one type of adverse reaction to medications, they are clinically very important because of the morbidity and mortality they cause. An ever-expanding pharmacopeia increases the potential for allergic drug reactions.
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Eosinophilic Drug Allergy

Clinical Reviews in Allergy & Immunology, 2015
While peripheral or tissue eosinophilia may certainly characterize drug eruptions, this feature is hardly pathognomonic for a medication-induced etiology. While delayed drug hypersensitivity reactions with prominent eosinophilic recruitment have been typically classified as type IVb reactions, their pathophysiology is now known to be more complex ...
David A. Khan, Merin Kuruvilla
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Drug Allergies

DeckerMed Medicine, 2022
Aimee L. Speck, James L Baldwin
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Drug Allergies

DeckerMed Emergency Medicine, 2020
Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are very common, causing approximately 2% of emergency department visits. It is estimated that approximately one-half of these ADRs are preventable. Although most ADRs and allergic reactions are minor, some may be severe, and the emergency physician's first priority should be the identification of anaphylactic or life ...
Amanda Ventura   +2 more
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Drug Allergy in Mastocytosis

Immunology and Allergy Clinics of North America, 2014
Drugs are known triggers of anaphylaxis in patients with mastocytosis even to the association between drug anaphylaxis and mastocytosis does not appear frequently appear. Nevertheless, mast cell disorders might be ruled out in cases of severe systemic reactions. Careful examination of the skin should accompany measurement of basal serum tryptase levels.
Carla Lombardo, Patrizia Bonadonna
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T cells in drug allergy

Current Allergy and Asthma Reports, 2002
In recent years, increasing evidence has indicated an important role for T cells in various drug-induced diseases. A detailed analysis of patients with various drug allergies revealed the existence of drug-specific T cells in the circulation or in eluate from skin infiltration in bullous, pustular, and maculopapular drug eruptions.
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Desensitization for drug allergy

Current Opinion in Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 2006
Desensitization for drug allergy is the induction of temporary clinical unresponsiveness to drug antigens. Gradual reintroduction of small doses of drug antigen at fixed time intervals allows for the delivery of full therapeutic doses, protecting patients from anaphylaxis.
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Drug Allergy

2017
The aim of this chapter is to stress the significance and importance of drug hypersensitivity in the context of primary care and general medicine. It provides a very concise review of the basic pathogenetic concepts of drug hypersensitivity. The focus lies on a detailed clinical description including the warning signs (‘red flags’) for a potentially ...
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PROBLEMS OF DRUG ALLERGY

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1955
An advertisement for a recent edition of the "Red Book," which lists all of the 140,000 medicaments handled by pharmacists and available to physicians for patients, states that "14,000 new drugs" were issued by drug manufacturers in 1953. In actuality, there were few really new drugs. The number given represents some truly introduced for the first time,
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