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Testing for Penicillin AllergyBy:
I recently had an allergic reaction to penicillin and was treated at the local emergency room. I am a pharmacy technician, and now I have been removed from my job until I can produce evidence of what, if anything, will happen to me when counting penicillin or its derivatives. That may involve breathing in pill dust or touching the medication. I can't find any information on this. Can you help me?
Dawn
There are several types of allergy to penicillin. The most serious reaction is an immediate hypersensitivity. With this allergic reaction, within 30-60 minutes of exposure to the drug -- sometimes sooner -- the patient develops hives. When the reaction is severe, the person also can develop such serious problems as swelling in the throat and hypotension (abnormally low blood pressure), which can lead to death if prompt treatment is not given. Fortunately, these severe reactions are quite uncommon. Far more often, the allergic person develops a morbilliform (measles-like) rash, which occurs several days after exposure to the drug and is rarely life-threatening. In addition, many people who claim to have an allergy to penicillin actually do not. Frequently, a rash occurs as part of an illness, not as a response to penicillin treatment, and the drug is an innocent bystander.
There are allergy tests that can be performed to determine whether you have immediate hypersensitivity to penicillin. IgE antibodies, proteins made by the body's immune system, play a key role in such allergic reactions. Skin testing will determine whether you have IgE antibodies directed against penicillin -- or more precisely, IgEs directed against the breakdown products of penicillin, which trigger this type of reaction.
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