pre-IC5 Flashcards
What is an allergy?
An immunologically mediated hypersensitivity reaction to a substance in a sensitised person.
How is hypersensitivity different from an allergy?
It is not proven to be a/w an immune response
Possible cause of hypersensitivity
Drugs can cause the release of mast cell and basophil-derived mediators by a pharmacologic/ physical effect rather than IgE
Examples of hypersensitivity reactions
- Vancomycin: ‘Red man syndrome’ -> direct release of histamines
- ACE/ Sacubitril: Angioedema -> Inhibition of bradykinin
- NSAIDs: NSAIDs induced asthma -> Alter metabolism of prostaglandins
What is anaphylaxis?
It is an acute, life threatening reaction which involves multiple organ systems.
Signs of anaphylaxis + frequency
- Skin (hives, urticaria): 80-90% of reactions
- Airway (tightness + swelling of throat, hoarseness, scratchy throat, trouble breathing, wheezing, chest tightness): 80-90% of reactions
- GI tract (nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps, diarrhoea): 30-45% of reactions
- CVS (chest pain, low blood pressure, rapid heart rate (+ weak pulse)): 30-45% of reactions
- CNS (anxiety, headache, dizziness, confusion, tunnel vision, fainting): 10-15% of reactions
When is the risk of fatal anaphylaxis the greatest?
During the first few hours
Most commonly reported drugs causing anaphylaxis
NSAIDs, penicillin and insulins
Examples of clinical manifestations of hypersensitivity
- Serum fever/ drug fever due to circulating immune complexes (Antibiotics)
- Drug-induced autoimmunity e.g. haemolytic anaemia from methyldopa/ hepatitis from phenytoin
- Vasculitis due to inflammation and necrosis of blood vessel walls; may be limited to skin or involve multiple organs(allopurinol&thiazide)
- Asthma from NSAIDs
- Acute infiltrative and chronic fibrotic pulmonary reactions from bleomycin/ nitrofurantoin
- Eosinophilia, haemolytic anaemia, thrombocytopenia, agranulocytosis
What is serious cutaneous adverse reaction (SCAR)?
Includes drugs rash with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (DRESS), and mucocutaneous disorders: Stevens-Johnson Syndrome (SJS) and toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN)
What is the common cause of DRESS, its symptoms and mortality rate?
Common cause: Allopurinol/ Anticonvulsants
Symptoms: Triad of rash, eosinophilia & internal organ involvement
Mortality rate: 10%
What is the common cause of SJS/TEN, its symptoms and mortality rate?
Common cause: Antibiotics esp sulfonamides
Symptoms: Progressive ‘blistering’ disorders that constitute dermatologic emergencies -> progress to include mucous membrane erosion and epidermal detachment -> SJS < 10% detachment of body surface area; TEN > 30%
Mortality rate: SJS (1-5%); TEN (10-70%)
What is the common cause of SJS/TEN, its symptoms and mortality rate?
Common cause: Antibiotics esp sulfonamides
Symptoms: Progressive ‘blistering’ disorders that constitute dermatologic emergencies -> progress to include mucous membrane erosion and epidermal detachment -> SJS < 10% detachment of body surface area; TEN > 30%
Mortality rate: SJS (1-5%); TEN (10-70%)
4 types of hypersensitivity
Type I: Immediate hypersensitivity (mast cell derived mediators & cytokine-mediated inflammation)
Type II: Antibody-mediated diseases
Type III: Immune complex - mediated diseases
Type IV: T cell-mediated diseases