نتایج جستجو برای: drug eruption

تعداد نتایج: 599288  

2011
Sang Hee Cha Hei Sung Kim Jun Young Lee Hyung Ok Kim Young Min Park

A 69-year-old male presented with several painful erythematous patches on both palms and trunk several days after receiving iopromide (Ultravist®, Shering, Berlin, Germany). A fixed drug eruption (FDE) due to iopromide was suspected clinically. However, at that time, the patch test with iopromide at the lesion site gave negative results. Three years later, the patient was mistakenly administere...

2017
Sun Young Choi Joon Hyuk Suh Kui Young Park Kapsok Li Beom Joon Kim Seong Jun Seo Myeung Nam Kim Chang Kwun Hong

Vol. 29, No. 2, 2017 247 Received August 24, 2015, Revised April 7, 2016, Accepted for publication April 10, 2016 Corresponding author: Kui Young Park, Department of Dermatology, Chung-Ang University Hospital, Chung-Ang University College of Medicine, 102 Heukseok-ro, Dongjak-gu, Seoul 06973, Korea. Tel: 82-2-6299-1525, Fax: 82-2-823-1049, E-mail: [email protected] This is an Open Access arti...

2014
Fevzi Demirel Abdullah Baysan Sait Yesillik Ozgur Kartal Mustafa Gulec Ugur Musabak Osman Sener

Case report A 40-year old woman applied to the Immunology and Allergy clinic with pruritic erythematous lesions over the lateral sides of both arms and right hip within 30 minutes after the ingestion of ornizadole 500 mg tablet. She reported that five recurrent reactions emerged with the same drug on the same locations previously, and their severity was increased consecutively. She was prescrib...

Journal: :Current opinion in allergy and clinical immunology 2009
Tetsuo Shiohara

PURPOSE OF REVIEW Fixed drug eruption is a simplified disease model for elucidating the mechanism(s) of how skin inflammation is induced by skin-resident T cells. In this review, we focus on how the presence of intraepidermal CD8+T cells resident in the fixed drug eruption lesions can provide exciting new clues to our understanding of pathomechanisms of inflammatory skin diseases. RECENT FIND...

Journal: :Allergologia et immunopathologia 2006
C Villanueva Alvarez Santullano V Tover Flores M De Barrio Fernández P Tornero Molina A Prieto Garcia

Fixed drug eruptions due to ibuprofen have rarely been reported. Two days after treatment with ibuprofen, a 61-year-old woman developed erythema and pain affecting the tongue and oral mucosa. Two months later, the patient started ibuprofen and erythromycin for a catarrhal episode with reappearance of the same lesions in the oral mucosa 24 hours later. Furthermore, two new erythematosus-violaceo...

2008
H Belhadjali O Trimech M Youssef I Elhani J Zili

Fixed drug eruption (FDE) is characterized by recurrent well-defined lesions in the same location each time the responsible drug is taken. We report here a case of multiple FDE induced by atenolol in a 48-year-old woman confirmed by positive patch test in previously affected sites. Beta-blockers-induced FDE are very rare. Only two cases had been reported in the literature. To the best of our kn...

Journal: :Genitourinary medicine 1990
G M Connolly B G Gazzard D A Hawkins

A case of fixed drug eruption (FDE) secondary to foscarnet is reported. This drug has recently become available on a compassionate use basis for treatment of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection which may cause significant disease in immunosuppressed patients. Foscarnet provides a useful alternative to the only licensed anti-CMV drug currently available, namely ganciclovir (DHPG), as it has a differ...

Journal: :Acta dermato-venereologica 2011
Kohei Kato Takahiro Satoh Aya Nishizawa Hiroo Yokozeki

A 59-year-old woman presented with a 4-month history of erythematous plaques on her palms and extremities. The patient had a long-term history of using methotrexate (8 mg/week) and oral prednisolone (10 mg/day) as therapy for RA, which had been diagnosed at the age of 37. Laboratory findings were as follows: white blood cell count 10,300 /μl; C-reactive protein 1.27 mg/dl (normal < 0.3 mg/dl); ...

Journal: :Case reports in dermatology 2016
Ian Tattersall Bobby Y Reddy

Fixed drug eruption (FDE) is a localized type IV sensitivity reaction to a systemically introduced allergen. It usually occurs as a result of new medication, making identification and avoidance of the trigger medication straightforward; however, in a rare subset of cases no pharmacological source is identified. In such cases, the causative agent is often a food or food additive. In this report ...

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