IMMEDIATE NONALLERGIC PSYCHOTIC REACTION TO INTRAMUSCULAR PROCAINE PENICILLIN |
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Authors: | ELLEN M. EINTERZ M.D. CM. M.P.H. T.M. ROBERT M. EINTERZ M.D. |
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Affiliation: | From the Public Health Service and the Hôpital d'Arrondissement, Kolofata, Cameroun;and the Department of Internal Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana. |
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Abstract: | Background. Though little known by medical personnel, an immediate nonallergic psychotic reaction to intramuscular procaine penicillin has been reported occasionally from many countries since 1951. Materials and Methods. A case report describes a patient whose violent behavior, provoked by this reaction, resulted in legal action taken against him. Two other nonviolent cases are presented and are followed by a review of the literature. Results. Signs and symptoms of this reaction that appears to be to the procaine component resemble a pressor response and are therefore contrary to the signs and symptoms of an anaphylactic reaction. Anxiety, hallucinations, hypertension, and tachycardia are characteristic. The reaction is self-limited. Long-term psychologic sequelae might be averted by adequate reassurance. Conclusions. The importance of procaine penicillin as an essential drug in many parts of the world should not be diminished; however, recognition of acute nonallergic psychotic reactions is of paramount importance to assure proper patient management and to avoid misinterpretation of aggressive behavior. |
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