phenylthiourea has been researched along with Drug-Hypersensitivity* in 4 studies
2 review(s) available for phenylthiourea and Drug-Hypersensitivity
Article | Year |
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Advances in pharmacogenetics.
Topics: Alcohol Oxidoreductases; Catalase; Cholinesterases; Dicumarol; Diseases in Twins; Drug Hypersensitivity; Drug Resistance; Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions; Environment; Female; Genetic Diseases, Inborn; Glaucoma; Glucosephosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency; Hemoglobins; Humans; Infant, Newborn; Intraocular Pressure; Isoniazid; Malignant Hyperthermia; Mutation; Pharmaceutical Preparations; Pharmacogenetics; Phenylthiourea; Phenytoin; Pregnancy; Protein Binding; Racial Groups; Warfarin | 1973 |
Recent progress in pharmacogenetics.
Topics: Adult; Aged; Alcohol Oxidoreductases; Antipyrine; Asian People; Child, Preschool; Cholinesterases; Cyanides; Dicumarol; Diseases in Twins; Drug Hypersensitivity; Erythrocytes; Favism; Female; Glucosephosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency; Hemoglobins; Humans; Isoniazid; Liver; Male; Metabolism, Inborn Errors; Middle Aged; Pharmacogenetics; Phenylbutazone; Phenylthiourea; Phenytoin; Pregnancy; Primaquine; Twins; Warfarin | 1969 |
1 trial(s) available for phenylthiourea and Drug-Hypersensitivity
Article | Year |
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[Rifampicin in the treatment of active pulmonary tuberculosis. Controlled trial of isoniazid-rifampicin-thiocarlide versus isoniazid-streptomycin-thiocarlide in untreated tuberculosis. Treatment of relapses with the combination rifampicin-ethambutol-thioc
Topics: Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury; Clinical Trials as Topic; Drug Hypersensitivity; Drug Therapy, Combination; Ethambutol; Gastrointestinal Diseases; Humans; Isoniazid; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Phenylthiourea; Pyridoxine; Recurrence; Rifampin; Streptomycin; Thrombocytopenia; Time Factors; Tuberculosis, Pulmonary | 1974 |
1 other study(ies) available for phenylthiourea and Drug-Hypersensitivity
Article | Year |
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PTC-tasting ability in populations living in Kirghizia with special reference to hypersensitivity: its relation to sex and age.
The dimorphism in sensitivity to PTC, with a dilution scale up to 29, was studied in 320 male and 320 female Kirghiz students, 45 male and 200 female Russian students in Frunze, and in 734 Kirghiz schoolchildren in a high-altitude area of South Kirghizia. Gene t frequency was 0.44 for the Kirghiz students, 0.56 for the Russian students, and 0.54 for the Kirghiz schoolchildren. In all the groups studied it was established that such factors as sex and age have no modifying effect on sensitivity to PTC and the pattern of the distribution of sensitivity. In all the groups the frequency of 'tasters' exceeded that of 'nontasters.' Among the Kirghiz students there was a very small percentage (1.2%) of hypersensitive subjects (dil. No. 18), while 14.1% of the Kirghiz children of one Kyzyl-Dzhar school were hypersensitive. Genealogical studies showed that all the hypersensitive subjects belonged to one small stock and lived in the same village. Family studies of probands suggest the existence of a new (third) allele (T2) which determines hypersensitivity to PTC. Topics: Adolescent; Age Factors; Child; Drug Hypersensitivity; Female; Gene Frequency; Genes, Recessive; Genetics, Medical; Humans; Male; Phenylthiourea; Sex Factors; Taste; USSR | 1979 |