Only a local reaction or a systemic reaction.
Encountering these drug reactions can involve only the skin or be combined with systemic and visceral involvement, and the other type is divided into severe or non-severe, which mildly involves only the skin (itching of the skin often). It can be seen in all types,
in case of first exposure, we should be concerned about the delayed reaction of the drug, and without delay, we should ask about the severity and acceleration of this deterioration, and if it is severe, we should be hospitalized in an equipped hospital, and not only identify the drug or drugs that are the culprit, but also stop taking it immediately. and similar drugs should not be taken, this prohibition should be with the patient for the rest of his life, and it is necessary to suggest an alternative medicine and report this reaction to the authorities, and let allergists be their future advice on the path of their medicinal life and define a kind of pharmaceutical passport for patients, and in most cases these drugs are the culprit It is the first time to use them.
Local type only
Maculo-papular lesions are on the skin, which fortunately are 90% of delayed drug reactions and occur between 4 and 21 days after the start of use, although the lesions are seen less than 2 days after re-use (the date of end of use does not play a role in defining the delayed type) Lesions similar to measles (morbili form) with a good general condition, it starts from the trunk and is relieved by pressure (rarely it becomes purpuric on the legs and the pressure is still there) and if the lesion is a target, the skin inside is healthy, there is no involvement of the mucous membrane (mouth, eyes, nose) and It gets better without any treatment within 2 weeks, which is accompanied by scaling.
Medicines such as aminopenicillins, sulfonamides, carbamazepine, allopurinol, and non-steroidal analgesics play a role in causing it.
Other types only local
Delayed chronic urticaria with lichenoid eczematoid lesions and a fixed drug reaction that always causes the same lesion in the same location and intensity when using the drug.
Allopurinol sulfa called tetracycline and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs are the reasons for creating a fixed model, and the fixed type is rarely large and severe, which is similar to the severe types. but it is going well.
Severe or systemic types
They are usually fatal and require hospitalization, fortunately rare
- Erythema multiformal
is evident from its name, that skin lesions have different shapes, sizes, and even volumes, and it is mostly due to herpes infections (cold sores) and chlamydia pneumonia, and only 20% of its cases are caused by the use of barbiturates (phenobarb, etc.), ciprofloxacin, and even non-steroid pain relievers. Aminopenicillins may involve the mucosa (mouth), but without ulceration, and if it does not progress, the mucosal ulceration will not be too severe.
- Steven Johnson syndrome and toxic epidermal necroses
are degrees of a disease that is the most fatal type (30% fatal) Erythema multiforme with fever, malaise, and eye and face tightness at the beginning, skin lesions first appear similar macules on the trunk and then worse The targets become a prominent wound inside, mainly vesicles and blisters, and the mucous membrane of the eyes, mouth, and genitals is caught. During the examination (even), the epidermis of the skin is separated from the underlying surface (Nikolsky’s signs)
. Up to 10% of the skin surface involvement is Johnson’s acetone, and above 30% it becomes epidermolitoxic, and it is called an overlap between the two,
and if it reaches 90%, it is called exfoliative dermatitis.
- The acute general pustular reaction
appears with redness and burning patches on the face or armpits and groin, and the fever is also severe, and a large number of purulent pustules appear quickly. It is a delayed medicine and it starts in less than two days, even less than one day, and it gets better in 2 weeks, and 80% of cases are caused by the use of antibiotics, and if we make a mistake for antibiotic treatment, the patient gets worse.
- Induced drug hypersensitivity
is a drug reaction of eosinophilia with systemic symptoms, it is another name with fever, malaise, joint pain, enlarged lymph nodes, hepatosplenomegaly, even involvement of the lungs and kidneys, and in the blood, an increase in eosinophils and lymphocytes (even atypical) and an increase in inflammatory markers… the onset of skin conditions From mild maculopapular to widespread involvement of all the skin with high intensity, it is the most delayed drug reaction and is seen 2 to 8 weeks after taking it, and it is very long and permanent, and it lasts for weeks, and it gets better slowly, and there are even phases of recovery, and during the course of the disease, viruses It also awakens the latent, which increases the severity of the disease. It occurs mostly in elderly people over 60 years old, and anticonvulsant drugs such as carbamazepine are the cause.
- Medicinal vasculitis
is the creation of auto-immunity with drugs, which in the skin causes purpura and lupus-like lesions along with arthritis and muscle inflammation or kidney and lung involvement, and in the blood, an increase in ANA and anticardiolipin NK, an increase in immunoglobulin M, and a decrease in complement C4, distinguishing medicinal vasculitis from the idiopathic type, these abnormal tests in It is a drug model and the most important drug that causes vasculitis is anti-thyroid drugs, and it occurs even months after the start of anti-thyroid drugs.
Kidney or liver involvement has been separately reported as a drug reaction up to 3 months after the start of use.
Clinical exposure
has not caused a reaction, so that drug is not considered to be charged for skin lesions that have started more than a few days or is very unlikely.
If the history of previous use and the same lesions have been repeated, it is certain that the drug is the culprit, although most of the cases are due to consumption in the first place, and usually no one uses it anymore. ).
The first step is
to stop the drug. It is very important to stop the culprit drug as soon as possible. It is the first step. However, we must be careful not to blame all the drugs and not to stop taking the drug that is not blamed so that the underlying problem does not become a problem.
Exceptions:
Although the culprit drug has been identified, due to the mildness of the lesions or due to the importance of the underlying disease, sometimes we continue to use the culprit drug, which we have to do in the hospital, such as the treatment of nemocystic carinitis in AIDS with sulfonamide.