Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
54,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An 82-yr-old man was presented with fever and cough accompanied by generalized erythematous rash. He had taken mexiletine for 5 months, as he had been diagnosed with dilated cardiomyopathy and ventricular arrhythmia. Laboratory studies showed peripheral blood eosinophilia and elevated liver transaminase levels. Chest radiographs showed multiple nodular consolidations in both lungs. Biopsies of the lung and skin lesions revealed eosinophilic infiltration. After a thorough review of his medication history, mexiletine was suspected as the etiologic agent. After discontinuing the mexiletine and starting oral prednisolone, the patient improved, and the skin and lung lesions disappeared. Subsequently, mexiletine was confirmed as the causative agent based on a positive patch test. Drug-induced hypersensitivity syndrome is a severe adverse reaction to drugs and results from treatment with anticonvulsants, allopurinol, sulfonamides, and many other drugs. Several cases of mexiletine-induced hypersensitivity syndrome have been reported in older Japanese males with manifestation of fever, rash, peripheral blood eosinophilia, liver dysfunction without other organ involvement. Here, we report a case of mexiletine-induced hypersensitivity syndrome which presented as eosinophilic pneumonia in a Korean male.
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PMID:A case of mexiletine-induced hypersensitivity syndrome presenting as eosinophilic pneumonia. 2005 62

Drug-induced hypersensitivity syndrome (DIHS) is characterized by fever, rash and internal organ involvement, mostly in form of hepatitis, myocarditis, nephritis or pneumonitis, which may occur 1-8 weeks after medicine exposure. Fever is an early feature, usually preceding a widespread erythematous skin eruption, but the severity of the skin-related changes does not correlate with the extent of internal organ involvement. It is considered that anticonvulsants (particularly carbamazepine), antibiotics, allopurinol are the most frequent causative agents of DIHS. The underlying mechanisms causing DIHS are poorly understood--defective detoxification of the reactive drug's metabolites or genetic predisposition have been implicated. Diagnosis of DIHS is based on clinical presentation connected with drug intake, supported by a finding of eosinophilia, increased concentration of inflammation markers and abnormal biochemical parameters, mainly liver function tests. Treatment consists of immediate withdrawal of all suspected medicines, followed by supportive systemic corticosteroids. We describe a case of a 72-years-old female who developed symptoms of drug-induced hypersensitivity syndrome after approximately 4 weeks of taking anticonvulsant (Amizepin) due to sensual axonal polyneuropathy. Withdrawal of drug and treatment with systemic corticosteroids caused clinical improvement rapidly.
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PMID:[Drug-induced hypersensitivity syndrome--a literature review and the case report]. 2119 Jan 54