An immunosuppressant is a substance that performs immunosuppression of the immune system. They may either be exogenous. as immunosuppressive drugs, or endogenous, as e.g. testosterone. After organ transplantation, the body will nearly always reject the new organ due to differences in human leukocyte antigen haplotypes between the donor and recipient. As a result, the immune system detects the new tissue as "hostile", and attempts to remove it by attacking it...
An immunosuppressant is a substance that performs immunosuppression of the immune system. They may either be exogenous. as immunosuppressive drugs, ...
Immunosuppressant drugs greatly decrease the risks of rejection, protecting the new organ and preserving its function. These drugs act by blocking the ...
Immunosuppressant: An agent that can suppress or prevent the immune response. Immunosuppressants are used to prevent rejection of a transplanted organ and ...
Immunosuppressant medications help prevent organ rejection in transplants and reduce inflammation and autoantibody production in patients with autoimmune ...
Hi,
I'm not sure why you're asking but the link below may be helpful. It is listed on Wikipedia and, while wiki can't always be trusted, this looks pretty good...
Sorry
I came to know that it has some side effects too..
so pls refrain from this drugs..
There are others life saving drugs, which has good market .
diabetic
heart blocks.
In aids ,your...