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Pharmacy home >> Medicine articles >> Adverse effect
Adverse Effect
Adverse effect, in medicine, is an abnormal,
harmful, undesired and/or unintended side-effect, although not
necessarily unexpected, which is obtained as the result of a
therapy or other medical intervention, such as drug/chemotherapy,
physical therapy, surgery, medical procedure, use of a medical
device, etc. Iatrogenesis (literally, generated by a physician)
is a common cause of adverse effects. Using a drug or other
medical intervention which is contraindicated may increase the
risk of adverse effects. Adverse effects may cause medical complications
of a disease or procedure and affect negatively its prognosis.
The harmful outcome is usually
indicated by some result such as morbidity, mortality, alteration
in body weight, levels of enzymes, loss of function or as a
pathological change detected at the microscopic, macroscopic
or physiological level. They may cause a reversible or irreversible
change, including an increase or decrease in the susceptibility
of the individual to other chemicals, foods, or procedures (e.g.
drug interaction).
Reporting systems
In many countries, adverse effects
are required by law to be reported, researched in clinical trials
and included into the patient information accompanying medical
devices and drugs for sale to the public.
USA
In the USA several reporting
systems have been built, such as the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting
System (VAERS), the Manufacturer and User Facility Device Experience
Database (MAUDE) and thee Special Nutritionals Adverse Event
Monitoring System.
Australia
In Australia, adverse effect
reporting is administered by the Adverse Drug Reactions Advisory
Committee (ADRAC), a subcommittee of the Australian Drug Evaluation
Committee (ADEC). Reporting is voluntary, and ADRAC requests
health professionals to report all adverse reactions to its
current drugs of interest, and serious adverse reactions to
any drug. ADRAC publishes the Australian Adverse Drug Reactions
Bulletin every 2 months.
Adverse effects of medical procedures
Surgery, of course, may have
a number of undesirable or harmful after effects, such as infection,
hemorrhage, inflammation, scarring, loss of function, changes
in local blood flow, and so on. They can be reversible or irreversible,
and a compromise must be found by the physician and the patient
between the beneficial or life-saving consequences of surgery
versus its adverse effects. For example, a limb may be lost
to amputation in case of untreatable gangrene, but life is saved.
Presently, one of the greatest advantages of minimally invasive
surgery, such as laparoscopic surgery is the redution of adverse
effects.
Other non-surgical physical procedures
such as high intensity radiotherapy may cause burns and alterations
in the skin. In general, these therapies try to avoid damage
to healthy tissues while maximizing the therapeutic effect.
Vaccination is a medical procedure
which is particularly prone to adverse effects, due to the nature
of its biological preparation (sometimes using attenuated pathogens
and toxins). Common adverse effects may be fever, malaise and
local reactions in the vaccination site, such as eczema vaccinatum,
a severe, sometimes fatal complicaiton which may result in persons
who have eczema or atopic dermatitis, and, as such, should not
be vaccinated, even if the condition is currently not active.
Diagnostic procedures may also
have adverse effects, depending much on whether they are invasive,
non-invasive or minimally invasive. For example, allergic reactions
to x-ray contrasting material occur often, a colonoscopy may
cause the perforation of the intestine wall, etc.
Adverse effects of drugs
Adverse effects can occur as
a collateral or side effect of many interventions, but they
are particularly important in pharmacology, due to its wider,
and sometimes uncontrollable, use by way of self-medication.
Thus, responsible drug use becomes an important issue here.
Adverse effects, like intended
effects of drugs, are a function of dosage or drug levels at
the target organs, so they may be avoided or decreased by means
of careful and precise pharmacodynamics (the change of drug
levels in the organism in function of time after administration).
Adverse effects may also be caused
by drug interaction, i.e., when physicians fail to check for
all medicaments a patient is taking and prescribe new ones which
interact agonistically or antagonistically (potentiate or decrease
the intended therapeutic effect). Significant morbidity and
mortality is caused around the world because of this. Drug-drug
and food-drug interactions may occur, and even so-called "natural
drugs" used in alternative medicine may have dangerous
adverse effects. For example, extracts of St. John's wort (Hypericum
perforatum), a phytotherapic used for treating mild depression
are known to cause an increase in the cytochrome P450 enzymes
responsible for the metabolism and elimination of many drugs,
so that patients taking it are likely to experience a reduction
in blood levels of drugs that they are taking for other purposes,
such as cancer chemotherapeutic drugs, protease inhibitors for
HIV and oral contraceptives.
The scientific field of activity
associated with drug safety is increasingly government-regulated
and is of major concern for the public as well as to drug manufacturers.
The distinction between adverse and non-adverse effects is a
major undertaking when a new drug is developed and tested before
marketing it. This is done in toxicity studies to determine
the non-adverse effect level (NOAEL). This studies are used
to define the dosage to be used in human testing (phase I) as
well as to calculate the maximum admissible daily intake. Imperfect
clinical trials, such as insufficient number of patients or
short duration, sometimes lead to public health disasters such
as those of fenfluramine (the so-called fen-phen episode), thalidomide
and, more recently, of cerivastatin (Baycol®, Lipobay®) and
rofecoxib (Vioxx®), where drastic adverse effects were observed,
like teratogenesis, pulmonary hypertension, stroke, heart disease,
neuropathy, etc., and a significant number of deaths. causing
the forced or voluntary withdrawal of the drug from the market.
Most drugs have a large list of
non-severe or mild adverse effects which do not rule out the
interruption of usage. These effects have widely variable incidence,
according to individual sensitivity. They comprise nausea, dizziness,
diarrhea, malaise, vomit, headache, dermatitis, dry mouth, etc.
Controversies
Sometimes, putative medical adverse
effects are regarded as controversial and generate heated discussions
in society and lawsuits against drug manufacturers. One example
is the current controversy whether autism may be caused by the
MMR vaccine (or by thimerosal, a mercury-based preservative
used in some vaccines). No significative link has been found
so far, but this has not prevented lawsuits. Another instance
is the potential adverse effects of silicone breast implants,
which lead to hundreds of thousands of litigations against manufacturers
of gel-based implants, due to allegations of damage to the immune
system which have not yet been conclusively proven.
Due to the exceedingly high impact
on public health of widely used medications, such as oral contraceptives
and hormone replacement therapy, which may affect millions of
users, even marginal probabilities of adverse effects of a severe
nature, such as breast cancer, have led to public outcry and
changes in medical therapy, although its benefits largely surpassed
the statistical risks.
Examples of adverse effects
- Abortion, miscarriage and/or severe vaginal or uterine
hemorrhage associated with misoprostol (Cytotec®), a labor-inducing
drug (this is a case where the adverse effect has been used
legally and ilegally for performing abortions)
- Addiction to many sedatives and analgesics such as diazepam,
morphine, etc.
- Bleeding of the intestine associated with aspirin therapy
- Deafness and kidney failure associated with gentamicin (an
antibiotic)
- Death, following sedation in children using propofol (Diprivan®)
- Dementia associated with heart bypass surgery
- Depression or hepatic injury caused by interferon
- Diabetes caused by atypical antipsychotic medications (neuroleptic
psychiatric drugs)
- Diarrhea caused by the use of orlistat (Xenical®)
- Erectile dysfunction associated with many drugs, such as
antidepressants
- Fever associated with vaccination (in the past, imperfectly
manufactured vaccines, such as BCG and poliomyelitis, have
caused the very disease they intended to fight).
- Glaucoma associated with corticosteroid-based eye drops
- Hair loss and anemia may be caused by chemotherapy against
cancer, leukemia, etc.
- Headache following spinal anesthesia
- Hypertension in ephedrine users, which prompted FDA to remove
the status of dietary supplement of ephedra extracts
- Insomnia caused by stumulants, Ritalin®, Adderall®, etc.
- Lactic acidosis associated with the use of stavudine (Zerit®,
for anti-HIV therapy) or metformin (for diabetes)
- Melasma and thrombosis associated with oral contraceptive
use
- Rhabdomyolysis associated with statins (anti-cholesterol
drugs)
- Seizures caused by withdrawal from benzodiazepine
- Sleepiness or increase in appetite due to antihistamine
use
- Stroke or heart attack associated with sildenafil (Viagra®)
when used with nitroglycerine
- Suicide, increased tendency associated to the use of fluoxetine
and other SSRI antidepressants
- Tardive dyskinesia associated with long-term use of metoclopramide
and many antipsychotic medications
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