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chloroquine and Serum Sickness

chloroquine has been researched along with Serum Sickness in 1 studies

Chloroquine: The prototypical antimalarial agent with a mechanism that is not well understood. It has also been used to treat rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, and in the systemic therapy of amebic liver abscesses.
chloroquine : An aminoquinoline that is quinoline which is substituted at position 4 by a [5-(diethylamino)pentan-2-yl]amino group at at position 7 by chlorine. It is used for the treatment of malaria, hepatic amoebiasis, lupus erythematosus, light-sensitive skin eruptions, and rheumatoid arthritis.

Serum Sickness: Immune complex disease caused by the administration of foreign serum or serum proteins and characterized by fever, lymphadenopathy, arthralgia, and urticaria. When they are complexed to protein carriers, some drugs can also cause serum sickness when they act as haptens inducing antibody responses.

Research

Studies (1)

TimeframeStudies, this research(%)All Research%
pre-19901 (100.00)18.7374
1990's0 (0.00)18.2507
2000's0 (0.00)29.6817
2010's0 (0.00)24.3611
2020's0 (0.00)2.80

Authors

AuthorsStudies
Calabro, JJ1
Katz, RM1
Maltz, BA1

Reviews

1 review available for chloroquine and Serum Sickness

ArticleYear
A critical reappraisal of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis.
    Clinical orthopaedics and related research, 1971, Volume: 74

    Topics: Agammaglobulinemia; Arthritis, Juvenile; Aspirin; Cardiomegaly; Child; Child, Preschool; Chloroquine

1971