Allergic reactions

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Abstract

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.

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APA

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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