Abstract
A 34-year-old male suffered from an allergic reaction after inhalation of decontaminating drugs for BMT. Clinical challenge tests were undertaken to determine the causal drug. It was found that vancomycin hydrochloride (VCM) repeatedly induced dyspnea, fever, hypoxia, eosinophilia, and elevation of CRP. Therefore, clindamycin (CLDM) was used instead of VCM for decontamination of patient respiratory tract. Although complete decontamination of the respiratory tract was not achieved during the leukocytopenic period, BMT was successful, and there were no life-threatening infectious complications. Although inhaled VCM-induced allergic reaction may be a very rare complication in the BMT setting, careful clinical attention should be paid to such patients.
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Kahata, K., Hashino, S., Imamura, M. et al. Inhaled vancomycin-induced allergic reaction in decontamination of respiratory tracts for allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. Bone Marrow Transplant 20, 1001–1003 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bmt.1701007
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bmt.1701007
Keywords
- vancomycin
- inhaled allergic reaction
- chronic myelogenous leukemia
- bone marrow transplantation
- decontamination