Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0042109 (
urticaria
)
6,569
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A large group of patients with suspected allergic reactions to beta-lactam antibiotics was evaluated. A detailed clinical history, together with skin tests, RAST (radioallergosorbent test), and controlled challenge tests, was used to establish whether patients allergic to beta-lactam antibiotics had selective immediate allergic responses to amoxicillin (AX) or were cross-reacting with other penicillin derivatives. Skin tests were performed with benzylpenicilloyl-poly-L-lysine (BPO-PLL), benzylpenicilloate, benzylpenicillin (PG), ampicillin (AMP), and AX. RAST for BPO-PLL and AX-PLL was done. When both skin test and RAST for BPO were negative, single-blind, placebo-controlled challenge tests were done to ensure tolerance of PG or sensitivity to AX. A total of 177 patients were diagnosed as allergic to beta-lactam antibiotics. We selected the 54 (30.5%) cases of immediate AX allergy with good tolerance of PG. Anaphylaxis was seen in 37 patients (69%), the other 17 (31%) having
urticaria
and/or angioedema. All the patients were skin test negative to BPO; 49 of 51 (96%) were also negative to
MDM
, and 44 of 46 (96%) to PG. Skin tests with AX were positive in 34 (63%) patients. RAST was positive for AX in 22 patients (41%) and to BPO in just 5 (9%). None of the sera with negative RAST for AX were positive to BPO. Challenge tests with AX were performed in 23 subjects (43%) to establish the diagnosis of immediate allergic reaction to AX, and in 15 cases (28%) both skin test and RAST for AX were negative. PG was well tolerated by all 54 patients. We describe the largest group of AX-allergic patients who have tolerated PG reported so far. Diagnosis of these patients can be achieved only if specific AX-related reagents are employed. Further studies are necessary to determine the exact extent of this problem and to improve the efficacy of diagnostic methods.
...
PMID:Immediate allergic reactions to amoxicillin. 809 27
Background:
Urticaria
is a common allergic disease that affects all age groups. Allergic disorders are diagnosed at allergy testing centers using skin tests. Though skin tests are the gold standard tests for allergy diagnosis, specialists are required to interpret the observations and test results. Hence, a computer-assisted medical decision-making (CMD) system can be used as an aid for decision support, by junior clinicians, in order to diagnose the presence of
urticaria
.
Methods:
The data from intradermal skin test results of 778 patients, who exhibited allergic symptoms, are considered for this study. Based on food habits and the history of a patient, 40 relevant allergens are tested. Allergen extracts are used for skin test. Ten independent runs of 10-fold cross-validation are used to train the system. The performance of the CMD system is evaluated using a set of test samples. The test samples were also presented to the junior clinicians at the allergy testing center to diagnose the presence or absence of
urticaria
.
Results:
From a set of 91 features, a subset of 41 relevant features is chosen based on the relevance score of the feature selection algorithm. The Bayes classification approach achieves a classification accuracy of 96.92% over the test samples. The junior clinicians were able to classify the test samples with an average accuracy of 75.68%.
Conclusion:
A probabilistic classification approach is used for identifying the presence or absence of
urticaria
based on intradermal skin test results. In the absence of an allergy specialist, the CDM system assists junior clinicians in clinical decision making.
MDM
Policy Pract
PMID:Computer-assisted Medical Decision-making System for Diagnosis of Urticaria. 3028 10