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Query: UMLS:C0042109 (
urticaria
)
6,569
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In summary, HAE is a dominantly inherited form of angioedema which is manifested by nonpainful, nonerythematous, nonpruritic and nonpitting swelling of the extremities, face, gastrointestinal and respiratory tracts unaccompanied by
urticaria
. These patients have deficient activity of the
C1 INH
and the laboratory diagnosis can be easily made by finding low C4 and C1 inh levels during an attack. Effective and specific therapy is now available that prevents the clinical syndrome and corrects the serologic hallmarks of the disease.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and management of hereditary angioedema (HAE). 37 41
Urticaria
and angioedema are usually the clinical consequence of vasoactive mediators derived from mast cells in the skin or mucosal tissues. Efforts to classify mast cell-mediated causes of
urticaria
and angioedema have generally been frustrated by their diverse pathogenesis and clinical course. The term acute is typically used to describe fleeting lesions whose recurrence does not extend beyond 6 weeks. Chronic is the term used to describe lesions that persist for more than a few hours but usually less than a day, and recurrences extend for more than 6 weeks. These definitions do not take histology into account. Skin biopsies of fleeting lesions demonstrate a paucity of inflammatory cells, whereas more persistent lesions display a spectrum of perivascular cuffing by predominantly T cells and monocytes. The presence of leukocytoclastic vasculitis in persistent lesions indicates an underlying immune complex disease. Many of the physical urticarias have fleeting lesions that can be induced with the appropriate stimulus for years. This review article has emphasized the clinical course and histology of
urticaria
and angioedema lesions in an effort to provide a more complete understanding of the pathogenesis and appropriate treatment. Clearly, avoidance of an identifiable inciting stimulus is optimum management, although most patients have no etiology defined or the cause is not realistically avoidable. At present, treatment options for these patients rely on antihistamines to control the immediate consequence of mast cell degranulation. Corticosteroids are reserved for the treatment of patients whose
urticaria
or angioedema lesions persist, reflecting the increasing involvement of mononuclear cells in the disease process. For leukocytoclastic vasculitis, corticosteroids are indicated, and cytotoxic drugs may be required for adequate treatment. Future treatments of
urticaria
and angioedema will evolve based on elucidation of the relevant cells and soluble mediators and will include counterregulatory or antagonistic peptides and drugs. C1 esterase inhibitor deficiency is a relatively uncommon cause of angioedema but is important to understand because of its ability to clinically mimic mast cell-mediated angioedemas and its unique pathogenesis and treatment. HAE can be divided into two serologic subtypes that simply reflect the location of the defect in one of the codominantly expressed
C1-INH
genes on chromosome 11. AAE can be divided into two serologic subtypes. AAE type I is due to massive consumption of
C1-INH
, presumably by tumor-related immune complexes. AAE type II is due to an anti-
C1-INH
autoantibody.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Urticaria and angioedema. 161 35
Two male patients with hypogonadism and four female patients who received an anti-androgen as contraceptive (cyproteronacetate) and who had recurrent angioedema are described. In one male patient, augmentation of the plasma androgen level resulted in disappearance of symptoms. In the four female patients, recurrent angioedema and
urticaria
developed after initiation of the anti-androgen treatment. Cessation of cyproteronacetate and a change to another contraceptive resulted in complete resolution of the previously frequent angioedematous attacks. The women are still symptom free after more than 60 patient's months. These cases suggest that an androgen deficit due to either hypogonadism or to anti-androgen treatment may be another cause of angioedema. One of the two male patients was untreated and presented with 40% normal value of
C1-INH
. Androgen therapy normalized
C1-INH
concentration in this male patient. Functional
C1-INH
in the same patient, studied before and after the beginning of androgen therapy, clearly increased when assessed by inhibition of amidolytic activity of C1-esterase. The other male patient with hypogonadism had already been under androgen treatment for 4 years and had
C1-INH
levels in the normal range. In the female patients, complement profiles were normal before and after cessation of anti-androgen contraception; however, the
C1-INH
plasma levels were higher after cessation of anti-androgen anticonception. These results indicate an effect of androgen deficit on the level of
C1-INH
in circulating plasma but do not prove a role of
C1-INH
in angioedema associated with diminished androgen plasma levels.
...
PMID:Recurrent angioedema associated with hypogonadism or anti-androgen therapy. 252 97
A functional determination of C1 esterase inhibitor (
C1 INH
) can be easily performed with an amidolytic assay by monitoring the inactivation of plasma kallikrein. In patients with
urticaria
as well as in healthy donors kallikrein inactivation, determined as the ratio of kallikrein activity at t60/t15, was found to be 0.47 +/- 0.06; in patients with hereditary angioneurotic edema (HANE). However, it amounted to 0.80 +/- 0.06. There was a good correlation between the inactivation rate of kallikrein and the protein levels of
C1 INH
(r = -0.93, p less than 0.001). In patients with HANE, levels of plasma kallikrein were slightly decreased (mean = 0.37 +/- 0.11 U/ml, normal mean = 0.47 +/- 0.09 U/ml), but still sufficient for monitoring kallikrein inactivation. In the case of one patient with functionally inactive
C1 INH
protein, the inactivation of kallikrein was impaired as in the conventional form of the disease.
...
PMID:A rapid method for functional determination of C1 esterase inhibitor in plasma. 617 50
The aim of the study was to evaluate concentration and activity of C1 esterase inhibitor (
C1 INH
) in patients with aspirin-sensitive
urticaria
. Deficiency of
C1 INH
is the basis for hereditary angioneurotic oedema. The study was performed in 32 subjects with aspirin-sensitive
urticaria
. The value of
C1 INH
in examined patients was the same as in control group. It seems there is no coexistence of aspirin-sensitive
urticaria
and C1 esterase inhibitor deficiency.
...
PMID:[Behavior of esterase inhibitor C1 in patients with urticaria due to aspirin hypersensitivity]. 840 39
The aim of the study was to evaluate the concentration and activity of C1 esterase inhibitor (
C1 INH
) in patients with aspirin-sensitive
urticaria
.
C1 INH
deficiency is the basis of hereditary angioneurotic edema. The study was performed on 32 subjects with aspirin-sensitive
urticaria
. The value of
C1 INH
in examined patients was the same as in the control group. There seems to be no coexistence of aspirin-sensitive
urticaria
and C1 esterase inhibitor deficiency.
...
PMID:The value of C1 esterase inhibitor in patients with aspirin-sensitive urticaria. 857 34
Congenital C1-inhibitor deficiency, or hereditary angioneurotic edema (HAE), is a rare autosomal dominant disease due to alterations in the C1 inhibitor gene that results in a deficiency of antigenic and/or functional
C1-INH
. Affected patients are heterozygous, and their deficiency is incomplete, many of them having up to 20% of the normal amount of the inhibitor. The disease is characterised by recurrent, circumscribed, non-pitting, and non-pruritic subepithelial swellings of sudden onset, which fade during the course of 48-72 hours, but can persist up to 1 week. Lesions can be solitary or multiple and primarily involve the extremities, larynx, face, and bowel wall. Bradykinin is believed to be the main, but certainly not the sole, mediator responsible for the bouts of edema in HAE. The diagnosis is suggested by family history, the lack of accompanying pruritus or
urticaria
, the presence of recurrent gastrointestinal attacks of colics, and episodes of laryngeal edema. Diminished C4 concentrations during symptomatic periods are highly suggestive for the diagnosis. Further laboratory diagnosis depends on demonstrating a deficiency of
C1-INH
antigen (type I) in most kindreds, but some kindreds have an antigenically intact but dysfunctional protein (type II) and require a functional assay to establish the diagnosis. Prophylactic administration of either attenuated androgens or protease inhibitors has proved useful in reducing frequency or severity of attacks. Infusions of a vapour-heated
C1-INH
concentrate are safe and effective means of both preventing and treating attacks. Nevertheless, this treatment is expensive and this extract is not readily available. It is emphasised that administration of angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors is contraindicated in patients suffering from protease inhibitor deficiency states.
...
PMID:Hereditary angioneurotic edema: review of the literature. 1078 4
Angioedema without
urticaria
is a clinical syndrome characterised by self-limiting local swellings involving the deeper cutaneous and mucosa tissue layers. Most occurrences of angioedema respond to treatment with a histamine H1 receptor blocker (antihistamine) because they are an allergic or parallergic reaction. A small number of cases do not respond to antihistamine treatment. Such cases tend to occur in patients with deficiency or dysfunction of the inhibitor of the first component of the complement (
C1-INH
), but more rarely can occur in patients with other conditions and as an adverse drug reaction. Angioedema is well documented in patients taking ACE inhibitors. Considering that 35 to 40 million patients are treated worldwide with ACE inhibitors, this drug class could account for several hundred deaths per year from laryngeal oedema. ACE inhibitors certainly do not mediate angioedema through an allergic or idiosyncratic reaction. For this reason the relationship with this drug is often missed and consequently quite underestimated. Rare instances of angioedema have also been reported with angiotensin II receptor antagonists. This adverse effect seems to occur less frequently with angiotensin II receptor antagonists than with ACE inhibitors. However, we do not know whether this adverse effect has the same mechanism with the 2 classes of medications. Some cases of severe angioedema have been recently reported after treatment with fibrinolytic agents. Scattered reports suggest the possibility of angioedema associated with the use of estrogens, antihypertensive drugs other than ACE inhibitors, and psychotropic drugs. Angioedema can also occur with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. Prevention of angioedema relies first on the patient history. Estrogen and ACE inhibitors should be avoided in a patient with congenital or acquired
C1-INH
deficiency. In the case of ACE inhibitors, the appearance of angioedema following long term treatment does not lessen the probability that such an agent could be the cause. The most important action to take in a patient with suspected drug-induced angioedema is to discontinue the pharmacological agent. Epinephrine (adrenaline), diphenydramine and intravenous methylprednisolone have been proposed for the medical management of airway obstruction, but so far no controlled studies have demonstrated their efficacy. If the acute airway obstruction leads to life-threatening respiratory compromise an emergency cricothyroidotomy must be performed.
...
PMID:Drug-induced angioedema without urticaria. 1148 Apr 92
Although frequently reported as an aetiology for chronic angioneurotic oedema or
urticaria
, food allergy is often a diagnosis proposed in the absence of more convincing evidence, as illustrated by the disappointing results of eviction regimens. We report a series of women with an initial diagnosis of food allergy, but in whom the role of oral contraceptives was subsequently demonstrated. Detailed medical history was obtained from 26 young women presenting with chronic angioneurotic oedema or
urticaria
initially attributed to food allergy, but in whom C1-esterase inhibitor (
C1 INH
) deficiency was demonstrated. We investigated the effects of oral contraception on
C1 INH
levels,
C1 INH
activity and clinical symptoms of these patients. Discontinuation of oral contraception induced an increase in
C1 INH
levels and
C1 INH
activity, associated with recovery or marked improvement of the clinical symptoms formerly attributed to food allergy. The relatively high frequency of women taking cyproterone acetate in this population appeared to be a remarkable finding. Replacement of the initial contraception containing ethinylestradiol by a progestogen maintained or even accentuated these good therapeutic results. Exogenous oestrogens, such as those contained in most oral contraceptives, may play an iatrogenic role in the aetiology of chronic angioneurotic oedema or
urticaria
.
...
PMID:Exogenous oestrogen as an alternative to food allergy in the aetiology of angioneurotic oedema. 1250 53
Angioedema can be caused by either mast cell degranulation or activation of the kallikrein-kinin cascade. In the former case, angioedema can be caused by allergic reactions caused by immunoglobulin E (IgE)-mediated hypersensitivity to foods or drugs that can also result in acute
urticaria
or a more generalized anaphylactic reaction. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (cyclooxygenase 1 inhibitors, in particular) may cause angioedema with or without
urticaria
, and leukotrienes may have a particular role as a mediator of the swelling. Reactions to contrast agents resemble allergy with basophil and mast cell degranulation in the absence of specific IgE antibody and can be generalized, that is, anaphylactoid. Angioedema accompanies chronic urticaria in 40% of patients, and approximately half have an autoimmune mechanism in which there is IgG antibody directed to the subunit of the IgE receptor (40%) or to IgE itself (5%-10%). Bradykinin is the mediator of angioedema in hereditary angioedema types I and II (C1 inhibitor [INH] deficiency) and the newly described type III disorder some of which are caused bya mutation involving factor XII. Acquired
C1 INH
deficiency presents in a similar fashion to the hereditary disorder and is due either toC1 INH depletion by circulating immune complexes or to an IgG antibody directed to
C1 INH
. Although each of these causes excessive bradykinin formation because of activation of the plasma bradykinin-forming pathway, the angioedema due to angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors is caused by excessive bradykinin levels due to inhibition of bradykinin degradation. Idiopathic angioedema (ie, pathogenesis unknown) may be histaminergic, that is, caused by mast cell degranulation with histamine release, or nonhistaminergic. The mediator pathways in the latter case are yet to be defined. A minority may be associated with the same autoantibodies associated with chronic urticaria. Angioedema that is likely to be life threatening (laryngeal edema or tongue/pharyngeal edema that obstructs the airway) is seen in anaphylactic/anaphylactoid reactions and the disorders mediated by bradykinin.
...
PMID:Angioedema. 2328 6
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