Cefaclor and Serum Sickness-Like Reaction-Reply
暂无分享,去创建一个
In Reply. —Originally, the serum sickness reaction was described following the administration of horse antiserum. Recently, the serum sickness reaction has been associated with the administration of penicillin, hydralazine, sulfonamides, or thiazide diuretics. This clinical entity results from the formation and deposition of detectable antigen-antibody complexes in blood vessels. Subsequent activation of the immune system and release of vasoactive amines results in clinical disease from 1 to 3 weeks, but usually 7 to 10 days after exposure to the antigen. An urticarial or maculopapular skin rash is the most common sign, occurring 90% of the time. Arthralgias occur in 50% of the cases. Fever, lymphadenopathy, and proteinuria are less frequent. The clinical course is usually benign and resolves quickly after withdrawal of the offending antigen. Epinephrine, antihistamines, and/or steroids may be helpful in more severe cases. 1 From the late 1970s through 1991, Eli Lilly and Co collected and investigated spontaneous reports
[1] G. Kearns,et al. Serum sickness-like reactions to cefaclor: role of hepatic metabolism and individual susceptibility. , 1994, The Journal of pediatrics.
[2] J. A. Martín,et al. Serum sickness‐like syndrome associated with cefaclor therapy , 1992, Allergy.
[3] L. R. Levine. Quantitative comparison of adverse reactions to cefaclor vs. amoxicillin in a surveillance study , 1985, Pediatric infectious disease.
[4] E. Stiehm,et al. Immunologic disorders in infants and children , 1973 .