| Literature DB >> 29507580 |
Abstract
Antivenoms or antitoxins have been effectively used for more than a century. During this time, these products have always proven to be highly effective in the treatment of infections and envenomations. However, antivenoms did not exhibit good safety results in their initial applications. After many improvements, antivenoms have substantially better safety profiles but still have some side effects. Due to the occurrence of adverse reactions, the practice of using premedication with the intent to decrease side effects has become accepted or mandatory in many countries. The drugs used for premedication belong to the histamine H1 antagonist, glucocorticoid and catecholamine groups. Currently, this practice is being questioned due to low or controversial efficacies in clinical assays. In this article, we discuss the causes of adverse reactions, the mechanisms of drugs that block the undesired effects and the results obtained in clinical trials. Although these three families of drugs could have positive effects on reducing adverse reactions, only adrenaline has demonstrated positive results in clinical assays.Entities:
Keywords: Adrenaline; Adverse reactions; Antihistaminic; Hydrocortisone; Premedication; Snakebite accident
Year: 2018 PMID: 29507580 PMCID: PMC5831611 DOI: 10.1186/s40409-018-0144-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Venom Anim Toxins Incl Trop Dis ISSN: 1678-9180
Types of adverse reactions caused by antivenoms
| Adverse reaction | Type | Cause | Mechanism | Main physiological effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IgE-mediated anaphylactic | Early | Presence of patient IgE against any component of antivenom | Basophil and mast cell degranulation by IgE. | Increased vascular permeability, vasodilatation, bronchial and visceral smooth-muscle contraction, anaphylactic shock |
| Non IgE-mediated anaphylactic | Early | Presence of aggregates, Fc fragments or heterophilic antibodies against blood cells in antivenom | Complement activation by Ig aggregates and others. | Increased vascular permeability, vasodilatation, bronchial and visceral smooth-muscle contraction, rash, urticaria, pain |
| Pyrogenic | Early | Presence of endotoxins in antivenom | Macrophage and other cell activation by endotoxins. | Fever |
| Serum sickness | Late | Humoral immune response to antivenom | Complement activation by immunocomplex. | Rash, glomerulonephritis |
Ig immunoglobulin, IgE immunoglobulin E, TNF-α tumor necrosis factor alpha, IL-1 interleukin 1, IL-6 interleukin 6
Premedication used in antivenom treatment
| Drug | Possible adverse reaction | Mechanism Involved | Clinical trial efficacy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adrenaline | Anaphylactic | Strong actions that directly oppose the effects triggered by mast cell and basophil activation. | Yes |
| Glucocorticoids | Anaphylactic | Phospholipase A and cyclooxygenase inhibition. | Noa |
| Antihistamines | Non IgE anaphylactic | Reduce or block the actions of histamine by reversible competitive binding to the H1 receptor | Noa |
aGlucocorticoids and antihistamines alone did not show efficacy but two trials show some efficacy using hydrocortisone together with an antihistamine