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Cutaneous Adverse Drug Reactions in Older Adults Part II: Management

Cutaneous Adverse Drug Reactions in Older Adults Part II: Management

Teaser: 

G.A.E. Wong, MBChB, MRCP(UK), and N.H. Shear, MD, FRCP(C), Divisions of Dermatology and Clinical Pharmacology, Sunnybrook & Women’s College Health Sciences Centre, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON.

Cutaneous adverse drug reactions are a common problem affecting ambulatory and hospitalized patients. Older patients may be predisposed to adverse drug reactions due to inappropriate medication prescription, age-associated changes in pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, altered homeostatic mechanisms, multiple medical pathologies, and use of drugs with a narrow therapeutic margin. In this second of two articles, the management of cutaneous adverse drug reactions
is reviewed.

Key words: adverse drug reaction, skin, cutaneous, rash, drug eruption, treatment, management.