29 research outputs found

    Is PPD a useful screening agent?

    No full text

    Patch testing in systemic drug eruptions

    No full text

    Prevention and rehabilitation

    No full text

    A review of drug patch testing and implications for HIV clinicians

    No full text
    Systemic drug-induced hypersensitivity reactions (HSRs) have been reported for a variety of drugs, and are thought to have a combined immunological, genetic and metabolic basis. These diverse idiosyncratic reactions are both drug and host dependent, and subsequent rechallenge with the drugs responsible can result in a potentially life-threatening clinical reaction.Hypersensitivity has been observed in regard to several drugs used to manage HIV and associated infections, with the antiretrovirals nevirapine and abacavir being the best characterized of the syndromes. These events represent a high cost both to the patient and the healthcare system, and those labelled as being hypersensitive to one or both drugs may find their treatment options significantly reduced.The identification of HSRs can be challenging due to the heterogeneity of their clinical manifestations. Furthermore, with multidrug regimens - common in HIV management - it may be difficult to identify the drug responsible. Epicutaneous patch testing, a procedure well established in contact dermatitis, has also been used as a supplementary diagnostic test for several drug-related HSRs; its usefulness, however, depends on both the drug and syndrome involved. This study discusses HSRs and the application of patch testing to their investigation, with particular emphasis on HIV and abacavir - the antiretroviral with which patch testing has been most studie

    A review of drug patch testing and implications for HIV clinicians

    No full text
    Systemic drug-induced hypersensitivity reactions (HSRs) have been reported for a variety of drugs, and are thought to have a combined immunological, genetic and metabolic basis. These diverse idiosyncratic reactions are both drug and host dependent, and subsequent rechallenge with the drugs responsible can result in a potentially life-threatening clinical reaction.Hypersensitivity has been observed in regard to several drugs used to manage HIV and associated infections, with the antiretrovirals nevirapine and abacavir being the best characterized of the syndromes. These events represent a high cost both to the patient and the healthcare system, and those labelled as being hypersensitive to one or both drugs may find their treatment options significantly reduced.The identification of HSRs can be challenging due to the heterogeneity of their clinical manifestations. Furthermore, with multidrug regimens - common in HIV management - it may be difficult to identify the drug responsible. Epicutaneous patch testing, a procedure well established in contact dermatitis, has also been used as a supplementary diagnostic test for several drug-related HSRs; its usefulness, however, depends on both the drug and syndrome involved. This study discusses HSRs and the application of patch testing to their investigation, with particular emphasis on HIV and abacavir - the antiretroviral with which patch testing has been most studie

    Patch-test-induced subjective complaints.

    No full text
    0.05). CONCLUSION: The results confirm those of our earlier study and demonstrate that patch testing can cause subjective complaints, especially when positive patch tests are present
    corecore