The Asian Age

Antibiotic­s cause severe allergic reactions in surgery

-

Antibiotic­s are the main cause of life- threatenin­g allergic reactions during surgery, a new report suggests. The Royal College of Anaestheti­sts says more patients are claiming to be allergic to penicillin, leading to other riskier antibiotic­s being used. Out of nearly 300 life- threatenin­g reactions, there were 10 deaths in one year in the NHS in the UK. Anaestheti­sts said some of the deaths could have been prevented. Anaphylaxi­s in the operating theatre is a life- threatenin­g reaction to a drug that happens without warning. In extreme cases, it rapidly progresses to cardiac arrest or even death. There are around 3 million anaestheti­cs given to patients in NHS hospitals each year and the vast majority “are safe and uneventful”, the report says. However, the risk of lifethreat­ening reactions is around one in 10,000 operations. Allergy clinic waits It was previously thought that muscle relaxants were the main culprit, but this report has found nearly half of all anaphylaxi­s cases were caused by antibiotic­s administer­ed to prevent surgical infections. Teicoplani­n was found to be the antibiotic with the highest risk of anaphylaxi­s and is regularly used for patients who say they are allergic to penicillin. The report concludes that some of the antibiotic- related deaths could have been prevented if the true risk of allergy had been identified. But waiting- lists for allergy clinics are, on average, more than three months. The report says up to 90% of patients who say they have a penicillin allergy are in fact not allergic. They recommend that antibiotic­s should be given while the patient is still awake.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India