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Primaquine, adverse drug reaction

In some drug reactions, several of these hypersensitivity responses may present simultaneously. Some adverse reactions to drugs may be mistakenly classified as allergic or immune when they are actually genetic deficiency states or are idiosyncratic and not mediated by immune mechanisms (eg, hemolysis due to primaquine in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency, or aplastic anemia caused by chloramphenicol). [Pg.1204]

The chemotherapeutic response of Plasmodium berghei to various combinations of mefloquine with other drugs (sulfadoxine + pyrimethamine, primaquine, floxacrine) have shown that the desired effects are purely additive (SEDA-13, 809), so the adverse effects too are probably only those of the individual compounds. Adverse reactions occurred in 46% of 400 patients treated with Fanimef (mefloquine + pyrimethamine + sulfadoxine) (SEDA-12, 693). Of note were dizziness (29%), nausea (9.5%), vomiting (7.3%), weakness/lassitude (5.8%), abdominal discomfort or pain (5.5%), diarrhea (3.8%), pruritus (3.0%), insomnia (2.0%), and headache (2.0%). [Pg.2236]

G6PD deficiency (glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase enzyme deficiency) A genetically inherited condition, relatively common in Indian, African and some Meditteranean races. In affected people serious adverse reactions occur when they take certain drugs, e.g. the antimalarial drug primaquine, which causes red blood cell haemolysis leading to severe anaemia. [Pg.315]


See other pages where Primaquine, adverse drug reaction is mentioned: [Pg.1724]    [Pg.241]    [Pg.15]    [Pg.197]    [Pg.253]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.29 ]




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