Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0042109 (urticaria)
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Nonimmediate allergic reactions (NIRs) to drugs, which are the most common reactions induced by specific immunologic mechanisms, can be induced by all commercially available drugs. NIRs can appear hours, days, or even weeks after drug intake. They elicit a spectrum of manifestations, mostly affecting the skin, ranging from maculopapular exanthema and urticaria to other less common but more severe entities such as acute generalized exanthematic pustulosis, drug rash with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms/drug-induced hypersensitivity syndrome, Stevens-Johnson syndrome, and toxic epidermal necrolysis. The main pathologic event involved in NIRs is a T-cell effector response and the wide heterogeneity of clinical symptoms may reflect differences in the underlying immunologic mechanisms. Despite their clinical heterogeneity, NIRs share certain aspects such as the activation of T cells with increased expression of CD25 and HLA-DR. NIRs are classified as type 1 helper (T(H)1) T-cell responses, characterized by the production of interferon-gamma, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukin 2, T-bet, and the cytotoxic markers perforin and granzyme B. Diagnosis is often complicated because of the difficulty of obtaining a reliable clinical history, the important role played by cofactors such as viral diseases, and the low sensitivity of skin tests and in vitro tests. Further studies are thus required in order to improve our understanding of NIRs and refine our diagnostic criteria.
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PMID:Nonimmediate allergic reactions induced by drugs: pathogenesis and diagnostic tests. 1947 12

Exanthematic eruptions, together with urticaria-angioedema syndrome and fixed drug eruption, are the most frequent cutaneous adverse drug reactions. Among the drug-induced exanthems (DIEs), erythematous maculopapular eruptions are the most common. Their management, especially when retrospective, is often not easy, and it is based on the use of clinical criteria, history, results of some laboratory tests, drug elimination test, skin tests, and oral challenge test. The superficial perivascular and spongiotic dermatitis, which is the prevalent histopathological features of DIEs, is not very useful in the differential diagnosis with virus- and bacteria-induced exanthems (VBIEs). On the contrary, some immune-histochemical findings (interleukin-5 overexpression, concomitant enhancement of perforin, interleukin-5, and granzyme B production, positivity for fatty acid synthase-ligand-L in amoxicillin-induced exanthems) seem to be more important. These data justifie the inclusion of DIEs in the subtypes IVb and IVc of delayed hypersensitivity reactions.
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PMID:Histopathological and immunohistochemical features of drug-induced exanthems. 2481 45