Therapeutic indications and adverse reactions to intravenous gammaglobulin
The first therapeutic indication, and still currently the most applied of gamma globulin, is the one which uses its substitutive capacity in patients with antibodies deficiencies. Its immunomodulatory effectiveness with pro and anti-inflammatory activity holds a second place in their indications, in...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | Portuguese |
Published: |
Universidade de São Paulo
2014-03-01
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Series: | Medicina |
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Online Access: | http://www.revistas.usp.br/rmrp/article/view/80093 |
Summary: | The first therapeutic indication, and still currently the most applied of gamma globulin, is the one which uses its substitutive capacity in patients with antibodies deficiencies. Its immunomodulatory effectiveness with pro and anti-inflammatory activity holds a second place in their indications, in autoimmune and inflammatory illnesses. The first gamma globulin to be used in patients with agammaglobulinemia in the 50’s, were of intramuscular administration, with significant limitations on the volume and the infusion’s amount, as well as being painful . For over 20 years intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) has been widely used in human pathology. The first proteolytic enzyme-treated intravenous immunoglobulins allowed large doses infusions, thereby getting higher levels of IgC circulating in plasma, a subclass profile similar to the normal population, as well as a much higher average life expectancy. The pharmaceutical industry efforts brought about new more purified and viral safer immunoglobulins. The Cohn and cold ethanol methods were quickly supplemented with ulterior procedures that strengthened the viral safety of these products. The application of molecular techniques to the screening study of plasma donors, as well as incorporating new viral inactivation procedures during its manufacture, have made of IVIG a safe product whose consumption has exponentially increased in recent years. IVIG’s high cost, the hypothetical plasma supply problems and risks associated to its administration made essential the writing of usage protocols for official agencies, which, besides, hospitals also adopted. |
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ISSN: | 0076-6046 2176-7262 |