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The '''Schwartzman Phenomenon''' (Schwartzman Reaction) occurs when a small dose of [[endotoxin]] is injected subcutaneously resulting in a mild [[inflammation]]. When a second dose of endotoxin is injected intravenously, the original skin site [[injection]] site becomes hemorrhagic within a few hours. This reaction [[cannot]] be explained on the basis of immunity and is probably essentially toxic in nature.
The '''Schwartzman Phenomenon''' (Schwartzman Reaction) occurs when a small dose of [[endotoxin]] is injected subcutaneously resulting in a mild [[inflammation]]. When a second dose of endotoxin is injected intravenously, the original skin site [[injection]] site becomes hemorrhagic within a few hours. This reaction cannot be explained on the basis of immunity and is probably essentially toxic in nature.


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{{medical-stub}}
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{{WikiDoc Sources}}

Latest revision as of 12:50, 23 August 2017

The Schwartzman Phenomenon (Schwartzman Reaction) occurs when a small dose of endotoxin is injected subcutaneously resulting in a mild inflammation. When a second dose of endotoxin is injected intravenously, the original skin site injection site becomes hemorrhagic within a few hours. This reaction cannot be explained on the basis of immunity and is probably essentially toxic in nature.

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