Journal ArticleDOI
Immune hemolytic anemia associated with drug therapy.
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TLDR
The most common drugs to cause DIIHA are anti-microbials, which are associated with drug-dependent antibodies, and the most common drug to cause AIHA is fludarabine.About:
This article is published in Blood Reviews.The article was published on 2010-07-01. It has received 186 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Immune Hemolytic Anemia & Autoimmune hemolytic anemia.read more
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Journal ArticleDOI
Long-term sequelae of drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms: A retrospective cohort study from Taiwan
TL;DR: The sequelae of DRESS can be divided into 2 major types that appear to occur in different age groups: young patients tend to develop autoimmune diseases, whereas elderly patients are more vulnerable to end-organ failure.
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Diagnosis and classification of autoimmune hemolytic anemia.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors classified AIHA into warm, mixed or cold-reactive subtypes based on the optimal autoantibody-RBC reactivity temperatures and further subcategorized into idiopathic and secondary with the later being associated with a number of underlying infectious, neoplastic and autoimmune disorders.
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Treatment outcome of intravenous artesunate in patients with severe malaria in the Netherlands and Belgium
Annemarie Rosan Kreeftmeijer-Vegter,Perry J.J. van Genderen,Leo G. Visser,Wouter F W Bierman,Jan Clerinx,Cees K. W. van Veldhuizen,Peter J. de Vries +6 more
TL;DR: Data from the named patient programme demonstrate that IV artesunate is effective and well-tolerated in European travellers lacking immunity, however, increased attention needs to be paid to the possible development of haemolytic anaemia 2-3 weeks after start of treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI
Immune hemolytic anemia caused by drugs
TL;DR: DIIHA is often poorly investigated and many reports do not provide data to support the diagnosis, so it is important to exclude DIIHA in such patients as the only treatment needed is to discontinue the drug.
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Guidelines on the management of drug-induced immune and secondary autoimmune, haemolytic anaemia
TL;DR: Although recommendations are unchanged, an expanded version of this guideline is available as Appendix S2, and the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation nomenclature was used to evaluate levels of evidence and to assess the strength of recommendations.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI
Tazobactam-induced haemolytic anaemia, possibly caused by non-immunological adsorption of IgG onto patient's red cells.
R. E. Broadberry,T. W. Farren,S. V. Bevin,J. A. Kohler,S. Yates,I. Skidmore,J. Poole,G. Garratty +7 more
TL;DR: A patient with pneumonia was treated with Tazocin, however, the expected haemoglobin increment after transfusion was not achieved, and Hb and bilirubin levels returned to expected values.
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The immunological basis of purpura due to drug hypersensitivity.
TL;DR: The second way in which drug sensitivity hemolytic antemia can be produced is based on an auto-immune mechanism, and can be looked upon as an example of true hypersensitivity.
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Immunohematologic problems associated with bone marrow transplantation.
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Cross-Reactivity of Cefotetan and Ceftriaxone Antibodies, Associated With Hemolytic Anemia, With Other Cephalosporins and Penicillin
TL;DR: Most drug-induced immune hemolytic anemias since the late 1980s have been caused by the second- and third-generation cephalosporins, cefotetan and ceftriaxone, respectively, and there was very little cross-reactivity between cefOTetan antibodies and the drugs tested in the present study.
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Protein-quinone interaction: in vitro induction of indirect antiglobulin reactions with methyldopa.
TL;DR: Some of the immunologically atypical features of the sensitization of red cells by methyldopa or its structural analogues are explicable by the adherence, in vivo, of chemically modified, nonantibody gamma globulin which renders the red cell directly antiglobulin positive.