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Query: UMLS:C0033774 (pruritus)
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Anaphylactic shock as a result of trauma is very rare. We describe a 20-year-old Druze soldier who presented with anaphylactic shock due to rupture of a splenic echinococcal cyst induced by blunt trauma to the left chest wall and upper abdomen. The main clinical manifestations, which developed within minutes of the trauma, were high fever, pruritus, edema of the lips and eyelids, dyspnea, stridor and rhinorrhea. Eosinophilia was not present on admission but appeared 4 days later. Surgery revealed an intact echinococcal cyst in the left lobe of the liver and another in the spleen. The splenic cyst was torn, filled with blood and its contents had spread throughout the splenic tissue, but without peritoneal spillage. Recovery was complete after splenectomy and resection of the hepatic hydatid cyst.
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PMID:[Anaphylactic shock after traumatic rupture of a splenic echinococcal cyst]. 156 83

Ingestion of commercially processed honeybee-collected pollen produced potentially fatal consequences in a 19 year old asthmatic male. Symptoms of sore throat, facial itch and swelling, difficulty in breathing and stridor lasted for approximately two hours and was followed by clinical respiratory distress with widespread wheeze on auscultation of his chest. RAST and skin test data suggest that these complications appear to be mediated by IgE antibodies directed against the processed pollen, but not bee venom. Consumption of processed pollen by atopic individuals is, therefore, a potentially hazardous procedure with little therapeutic benefit.
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PMID:Acute hypersensitivity to ingested processed pollen. 386 27

Exercise-induced anaphylaxis (EIA) is a unique and an increasingly recognized syndrome consisting of premonitory symptoms and signs of generalized body warmth, pruritus, and erythema, which progresses on continued exertion to confluent urticaria, laryngeal edema with stridor or hoarseness, and gastrointestinal colic and frequently culminates in vascular collapse. Previous studies of five individuals with this condition have demonstrated significant elevations of serum histamine concurrent with the early clinical manifestations after experimental exercise. To assess relevant morphologic alterations in the skin of these patients, cutaneous mast cells were examined by light and transmission electron microscopy before and during the initial erythema elicited by exertion. The marked alterations observed in mast cells immediately after exercise consisted of (1) loss of electron density and internal substructure of granules, (2) fusion of granule membranes with those of adjacent granules and with mast cell membranes creating conduits to the extracellular space, and (3) an apparent decrease in the number of intact granules per cell. Biopsy specimens obtained before exercise from patients with EIA and from two normal individuals who served as control subjects were identical, and the control subjects had normal mast cell morphology after exercise. Serum histamine levels were significantly elevated in patients with EIA after exercise at the time of biopsy, whereas control subjects had normal levels. These observations provide evidence that EIA is a distinct form of physical allergy associated with mast cell degranulation similar in morphology to that of human pulmonary mast cell IgE-Fc-dependent activation secretion. Characterization of this disorder is important because its prevalence may be underestimated, and its clinical consequences, which may include some morbidity, are not fully known.
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PMID:Exercise-induced anaphylaxis: a serious form of physical allergy associated with mast cell degranulation. 398 Aug 83

According to the United States Food and Drug Administration, untoward reactions to capillary hemodialyzers occur at a rate of 3.5 of every 100,000 dialyzers sold. Allergic symptoms immediately after initiation of dialysis consist of burning retrosternal pain, sensation of diffuse heat, cold perspiration, periorbital and facial edema, flushing, laryngeal stridor, bronchial hypersecretion, hypotension, bradycardia, and loss of consciousness. In 1982 Popli et al. reported four patients suffering from such allergic manifestations; three were successfully managed after being taken off dialysis. These investigators thought that inadequate rinsing of cuprammonium cellulose capillary dialyzers was responsible for the reactions, and recommended rinsing the blood compartment with 2 liters of normal saline, and the dialysate compartment with 10 liters of dialysate, both in a single-pass fashion over 20 minutes. Nichols and Platts (1982) (3) reported 15 patients with urticaria, severe bronchospasm, and shock occurring immediately after the blood had been returned from the dialyzer. These authors suggested that the sterilizing agent, ethylene oxide (ETO), was responsible. Poothullil et al. (1975) (4) described a patient with pruritus, severe dyspnea, and hypotension during dialysis. On the basis of a positive skin prick test (dermal reaction to ETO-exposed human albumin) and of antigen-induced histamine release from peripheral leucocytes, these workers suggested that ETO was responsible for the allergic reactions. Marshall et al. (1984) (5) reported that 8.9% of hemodialysis patients had positive skin tests to ETO and that 12.1% were ETO-radioallergosorbent test (RAST) positive.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Three cases of hemodialysis-associated hypersensitivity reactions. 405 93

This report describes an extremely rare case of occupational allergy that developed in a frog handler. A 31-year-old female laboratory technician developed itching and urticaria one year after she began handling frogs and extracting their brains in the laboratory. Nine years later she noticed swelling of the right hand, stridor and dyspnea when she mistakenly injected her finger with a needle contaminated with extracts of frog brain. Specific IgE antibody to frog extracts was demonstrated by RAST and by P-K testing. However, no specific IgG antibody was found by agar gel diffusion or in heterologous PCA testing using guinea pigs. We suggest that allergic symptoms in this case were due to the development of Type I allergic reactivity to frog antigens.
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PMID:A new occupational allergy due to frogs. 660 74

There are very few case reports on allergic reactions to lychee in the literature - so far only in adults. We report on a 12-year-old girl who developed swelling of lips, pruritus, generalized urticaria and dyspnea 30 min after eating a raw lychee. A second event occurred after eating a piece of cake covered with a fruit cocktail. All other foods were well tolerated. In infancy the girl had suffered from atopic dermatitis, which disappeared in childhood; for the previous 2 yr she had presented with seasonal allergic rhinoconjunctivitis. Upon oral provocation, she developed restlessness, flush, generalized urticaria and inspiratory stridor 50 min after eating half a lychee. The diagnostic work up showed a clear positive skin prick test to raw lychee and specific immunoglobulin E (IgE) in serum to latex but not to lychee. In the cellular antigen stimulation test (CAST) carried out with lychee extracts in several concentrations, the same positive results could be found confirming an allergic reaction. Cross-reactivity of lychee to latex was shown by inhibition experiments using the UniCAP 100-system. In conclusion, it seems worthwhile considering the rare allergy to lychee in the case of unclear food-allergic reactions and lychee should be added to the list of foods cross-reacting with latex.
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PMID:Anaphylactic reaction to lychee in a 12-year-old girl: cross-reactivity to latex? 1200 May 1

A 40-year-old Caucasian man diagnosed with right deep venous thrombosis secondary to trauma was treated with subcutaneous enoxaparin. Within minutes of administering the first dose (1 mg/kg), he experienced an apparent anaphylactoid reaction; symptoms were abdominal pruritus, severe cough, shortness of breath, anxiety, and global pruritus. Physical examination revealed an erythematous macular rash and stridor on auscultation secondary to cervical edema. No other drugs were given before the reaction occurred, and the patient's only drug therapy at home had consisted of a daily multivitamin, and acetaminophen and ibuprofen as needed. Administration of low-molecular-weight heparins such as enoxaparin is increasing, and clinicians must be aware of the potential for adverse drug events such as hypersensitivity reactions.
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PMID:Anaphylactoid reaction to enoxaparin in a patient with deep venous thrombosis. 1243 80

A 20-year-old woman was referred for evaluation after about 2 years of recurrent episodes of localized urticaria during handling of several kinds of raw fish in a sushi shop, where she had worked part-time for 2 years. She had also experienced allergic symptoms such as itching and swelling of her lips, generalized urticaria, laryngeal tightness, stridor and dyspnea immediately after ingestion of raw and cooked seafood, including sole, horse mackerel, sea eel and shellfish, over the previous 1 year before referral. Skin prick tests and blood test for specific IgE antibodies were positive for many kinds of seafood, including sole, horse mackerel, sea eel, eel, crab, and abalone, which belonged to different taxonomic phyla, including Chordata, Arthropoda, and Mollusca. A challenge with a piece of broiled sole induced swelling of the lips, obstruction of the larynx, difficulty with deglutition, and abdominal pain. In addition, serum-specific IgE antibodies to two major fish allergens, parvalbumin and collagen, were detected by ELISA, suggesting that allergic symptoms could be induced by many kinds of seafood in the present patient. She was therefore diagnosed with occupational contact urticaria and oral allergy syndrome due to seafood. At the time of this report, the present patient had been followed for one year and no reactions have occurred since she started to avoid the causative types of seafood.
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PMID:[A case of occupational contact urticaria and oral allergy syndrome due to seafood]. 1727 58

A case of a 38-year-old woman is reported who was treated with hyperbaric oxygen therapy to cure a dehiscent wound. She suffered from "oral-allergy syndrome" (OAS) while eating certain fruits, and from itching when wearing latex gloves to handle hair dyes. Fifteen minutes after the start of compression, malaise, anxiety, dyspnoea, tachycardia, cold sweating and laryngeal stridor occurred. Despite intensive care treatment, face angioedema persisted for several days. On the basis of history, radioallergosorbent test (RAST) and prick tests, latex was assumed to be responsible for the anaphylactic reaction. To our knowledge, this is the first extensive report of an anaphylactic reaction to latex in a hyperbaric chamber. The lesson drawn from this case record can be summarized as follows: 1) never fail to collect a thorough history; 2) set up a latex-safe hyperbaric chamber when needed; 3) have an emergency kit always near at hand.
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PMID:Anaphylactic shock during hyperbaric oxygen therapy. 2240 Apr 52

Idiopathic anaphylaxis (IA) is defined as anaphylaxis without any identifiable precipitating agent or event. The clinical manifestations of IA are the same as allergen-associated (immunologic) anaphylaxis and include urticaria, angioedema, hypotension, tachycardia, wheezing, stridor, pruritus, nausea, vomiting, flushing, diarrhea, dysphagia, light-headedness, and loss of consciousness. Patients usually tend to have the same manifestations on repeated episodes. IA is a prednisone-responsive disease that is ultimately a diagnosis of exclusion. Approximately 40% of patients are atopic. Serum tryptase (or urine histamine or its metabolite) will be elevated acutely but if elevated in the absence of anaphylaxis, should suggest alternative diagnoses including indolent systemic mastocytosis. A focused history, examination, and follow-up will dictate whether a patient's symptoms may be attributable to disorders that mimic anaphylaxis, such as indolent systemic mastocytosis, carcinoid syndrome, pheochromocytoma, hereditary angioedema acquired C1 esterase inhibitor deficiency, or panic attacks. The presence of urticaria may help limit the differential because they do not usually accompany any of the aforementioned disorders, except for indolent systemic mastocytosis. IA is classified according to the symptoms as well as the frequency of attacks. Patients who experience six or more episodes in a year or two or more episodes in 2 months are classified as IA-frequent (IA-F). Patients who experience fewer episodes are classified as IA-infrequent (IA-I). This distinction is important because IA-F patients initially will require prednisone as disease-modifying therapy whereas most IA-I patients will not. Patients with IA must carry and know when and how to self-administer epinephrine.
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PMID:Chapter 25: Idiopathic anaphylaxis. 2279 98


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