What are other names for this medicine?
Type of medicine: vaccine
Generic and brand names: pneumococcal vaccine polyvalent,
injection; Pneumovax 23; PPV23
What is this medicine used for?
This medicine is given by injection (a shot) to provide protection
against diseases such as pneumonia, meningitis, and inflammation of
the ear. It may be used in children over 2 years of age and in adults.
What should my healthcare provider know before I take this
medicine?
Before taking this medicine, tell your healthcare provider if you
have ever had:
- a reaction to other vaccine shots or any other medicine
- a weakened immune system from diseases such as HIV/AIDS or from
cancer chemotherapy, radiation therapy, transplant rejection
medicine, or steroid medicine
- heart disease
- Hodgkin's Disease
- lung disease
- unusual bleeding or bruising.
Tell your healthcare provider if you have any infection with
fever. Vaccinations should be postponed if you have an infection
with fever.
Females of childbearing age: Tell your healthcare provider if you
are pregnant or plan to become pregnant. It is not known whether
this medicine will harm an unborn baby. Do not breast-feed while
taking this medicine without your health care provider's approval.
How do I use it?
This medicine is given by a healthcare provider, usually into a
large muscle.
This medicine is recommended for:
- adults over the age of 65
- diabetes, heart disease, chronic lung disease, kidney disease,
or liver disease
- alcoholics
- people who are immunocompromised due to HIV, leukemia, cancer,
organ or bone marrow transplant, or sickle cell disease
- children over age 2 who may develop pneumonia or meningitis
because of other serious medical conditions or middle ear
infections
- anyone whose spleen has been removed.
It is also recommended when a general outbreak of pneumococcal
infection occurs in a community or institution.
What should I watch out for?
This medicine may cause a fever of 101° to 103°F that lasts a short
time. If the fever doesn't go away or gets higher than 103°F,
contact your healthcare provider.
You may have some redness, tenderness, or pain where you had the
shot. It may last up to 2 days.
What are the possible side effects?
Along with its needed effects, your medicine may cause some
unwanted side effects. Some side effects may be very serious.
Some side effects may go away as your body adjusts to the
medicine. Tell your healthcare provider if you have any side
effects that continue or get worse.
Life-threatening (Report these to your healthcare provider right
away. If you cannot reach your healthcare provider right away,
get emergency medical care or call 911 for help): Allergic reaction
(hives; itching; rash; trouble breathing; tightness in your chest;
swelling of your lips, tongue, and throat).
Serious (report these to your healthcare provider right away):
Fever over 102°F, joint pain, severe rash, severe irritability,
severe headache, unusual weakness, numbness in arms or legs,
unusual bruising, seizures.
Other: Redness, tenderness, swelling, or a hard lump where the
shot was given; headache; muscle aches; mild fever.
What products might interact with this medicine?
When you take this medicine with other medicines, it can change the
way this or any of the other medicines work. Nonprescription
medicines, vitamins, natural remedies, and certain foods may also
have an effect. Using these products together might cause harmful
side effects. Talk to your healthcare provider if you are taking:
- corticosteroids such as cortisone (Cortone), betamethasone
(Celestone), dexamethasone, fludrocortisone (Florinef),
hydrocortisone (Cortef, Hydrocortone, A-HydroCort),
methylprednisolone (Medrol), prednisone (Meticorten, Orasone),
prednisolone (Delta-Cortef), and triamcinolone (Aristocort,
Kenacort)
- immunosuppressants such as azathioprine (Imuran), cyclosporine
(Sandimmune, Neoral, Gengraf), sirolimus (Rapamune), and
tacrolimus (Prograf, Protopic)
- medicines for cancer, chemotherapy, or radiation therapy.
Keep a list of all your medicines (prescription, nonprescription,
supplements, natural remedies, and vitamins) with you. Be sure
that you tell all healthcare providers who treat you about all the
products you are taking.
This advisory includes selected information only and may not
include all side effects of this medicine or interactions with
other medicines. Ask your healthcare provider or pharmacist for
more information or if you have any questions.
Keep all medicines out of the reach of children.
Do not share medicines with other people.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2007 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved.