Journal of Pharmaceutical Chemistry & Chemical Science

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Adverse Drug Reaction Scholarly Peer-review Journal

Adverse drug responses represent an embellishment of the drug's beneficial effects. For example, a individual taking a medicine to decrease high blood heaviness may feel light-headed or unsteady if the drug diminishes blood weight too much. A person with diabetes may progress faintness, sweating, nausea, and palpitations if insulin or an oral ant diabetic drug diminishes the blood sugar level too considerable. This type of adversative drug reaction is habitually probable but sometimes necessary. It may occur if a drug dose is too high (overdose reaction), if the individual is strangely penetrating to the drug, or if another drug slows the absorption of the first drug and thus surges its level in the blood (see Drug Interactions). Dose-related responses are usually not severe but are comparatively common. Allergic drug responses are not dose-related but necessitate prior experience to a drug. Allergic reactions progress when the body's immune system matures an unfortunate reaction to a drug (sometimes referred to as sensitization). After a person is sensitized, later acquaintances to the drug harvest one of several different types of sensitive reaction. Sometimes doctors do skin tests to help predict allergic drug responses.

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