In the professional lifetime of the average anesthesiologist, a lifethreatening allergic reaction will happen only once or twice. Current peer and patient expectation is of a polished clinical performance: rapid diagnosis and treatment and full patient recovery. This chapter will provide the theoretical and practical framework for this perfect response to a rare emergency. While advances in molecular biology have greatly increased our knowledge of probable mechanisms, the best advice we have on treatment is very anecdotal, and diagnostic methods remain rudimentary.
CITATION STYLE
Fisher, M., & Sage, D. (2003). Allergic reactions. In Wylie and Churchill-Davidsons: A Practice of Anesthesia, Seventh Edition (pp. 401–412). CRC Press. https://doi.org/10.12968/eqhe.2017.35.30
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