Upset stomach, causing vomiting, diarrhea and decreased appetite May also cause itchiness, hives and red skin Lethargy and depression Injectable lufenuron may
cause injection site reactions (small lump under skin).
Adjuvanted Feline leukemia vaccine can
cause Injection Site Fibrosarcomas, a fatal type of cancer.
Other feline vaccine manufacturers may contain harmful adjuvants which can
cause injection site tumors.
Not exact matches
If Grimm and Malliotakis have
cause to be upset, it is that the mayor proposed no
injection sites for Staten Island, the epicenter of the city's opioid crisis.
Doctors have known for decades that most general anesthetics may
cause a temporary burning sensation when administered or swelling around the
injection site.
For Spark, the
injection site is the eyes of people, mostly children and young adults, who have a type of inherited retinal disease
caused by a mutation in a gene called RPE65.
«We have seen that these toxins enter neurons at the
injection site,
causing the desired local paralysis, but Ewa and Jason have shown unambiguously the existence of a second entry pathway that takes some of the toxin molecules to other neurons.»
The drug was injected in no more than three
sites since we did not want to
cause extensive damage to the tissue covering the
injection site and
cause inflammation.
Bacterial infections also can
cause pain and abscess formation at
injection sites.
Progesterone
injections also tend to
cause a lot of pain at the
injection site.
Most vaccines
cause little more than pain and swelling at the
injection site.
• Using the Wrong Laser Parameters • Over-Stimulating Cancerous Cells •
Causing an Intra-Articular or Intramuscular
Injection Site to Swell • NOT using the laser enough
Did you hear about how sometimes certain vaccines can
cause a cat to grow a cancer tumor at the vaccine
injection site?
Cat vaccinations can
cause other risks like
injection site tumors and immune disease, however such incidences are extremely rare and can be linked to pre-existing genetic and medical conditions.
These include pain and stinging at the
injection site, swelling (inflammation of surrounding tissue) and vasculitis (inflammation of blood vessels) and are not
caused by the antigen itself being administered but rather by the conditions surrounding its administration (for example, temperature of the vaccine or inactive ingredients in the vaccine).
Causing an Intra-Articular or Intramuscular
Injection Site to Swell Veterinarians must be cautious when administering laser therapy after steroid or NSAID
injections.
In addition, some vaccines occasionally
cause a firm swelling at the
injection site (most often rabies, but occasionally FeLV and others).
Certain steroids and NSAIDs are photosensitive, so applying laser therapy over an intra-articular or intramuscular
injection site could
cause painful swelling and tenderness.
In some cases with dogs, inflammation results in immune cells crowding the
injection site,
causing a lump or firm swelling at the
site of vaccination.
Though a commonly used and an accepted
site, the thigh muscle is not an ideal place to give an intramuscular
injection in cats or small dogs as there is a large nerve that lives there - hitting this or getting to close too it (more likely in a small patient) would
cause marked pain.
The drug that's used (Immiticide TM - melarsomine dihydrochloride) is unlikely to
cause anything worse than some temporary soreness at the
injection site.
It is postulated that the adjuvants in vaccines can
cause chronic inflammation which leads to cancer at the
injection sites.
Con: It can
cause cancer in the
injection site.
These more advanced formulations appear to be less likely to
cause injection -
site sarcomas.
Both rabies virus and feline leukemia virus (FeLV) vaccines have been associated with
causing cancer at the
injection site in cats.
The vaccine itself is safe as far as the major adverse vaccine risks, but is likely to
cause pain at the
injection site (L shoulder) and a day or two of mild malaise.