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Query: UMLS:C0042109 (urticaria)
6,569 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cold urticaria is a condition with many clinical variants. We present the case of a young woman with a localized, perifollicular form that we believe represents a new and distinct clinical subtype of cold urticaria. We review other established clinical subtypes of cold urticaria.
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PMID:Localized, perifollicular cold urticaria. 156 46

Cold urticaria is a rare condition characterized by abnormal wealing following exposure to cold. It has been suggested that lipid-derived mediators may be involved in the pathogenesis of this condition. We have investigated whether the inflammatory reaction in cold urticaria is associated with the release of cysteinyl-leukotrienes. Leukotriene E4 (LTE4; a stable metabolic product of LTC4 and LTD4) and histamine were measured in the blood draining the site of a cold-challenge in five patients with clinical histories of cold urticaria. Three of the patients showed a typical clinical response to the challenge, and this was associated with an increase in the concentration of LTE4 and histamine. No increase in LTE4 or histamine levels were observed following cold challenge in the non-responding individuals.
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PMID:Leukotriene E4 release in cold urticaria. 253 40

Cold urticaria is probably the most common form of physical urticaria. It is usually a chronic idiopathic disorder but may be secondary to another disease characterized by abnormal serum proteins with a cold-dependent property. In delayed cold urticaria, hives appear 24 to 48 hours after cold challenge. In addition to challenge testing, the physician should obtain serologic tests to exclude the presence of associated cold agglutinins, Donath-Landsteiner antibody, cryoglobulins and cryofibrinogen.
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PMID:Cold urticaria. 286 42

Thirty-nine patients with cold urticaria seen over a 12-year-period were re-examined. All but 12 still had positive skin tests for cold and only five of these had shown a spontaneous cure. Fourteen patients were prone to collapse on cold exposure. The incidence of atopy in this group was comparable to that in control groups. Cold urticaria is an extremely chronic disease. The mean disease duration was 9.3 years. Serum antibodies to Epstein-Barr virus, measles virus, cytomegalovirus (CMV), varicella-zoster virus (VZV), herpes simplex virus (HSV), Chlamydia psittaci and Mycoplasma pneumoniae were determined in all 39 patients and compared with control groups. The EBV-antibody patterns (heterophile antibodies and different types of EBV-specific antibodies) showed no evidence of current or of recent primary or secondary infection with EBV. Complement fixing antibody titres to measles virus, CMV, HSV and Mycoplasma pneumoniae were significantly higher in cold urticaria patients than in controls. The existence of a basic immuno-regulatory defect responsible for both the cold urticaria and the elevated antibody levels is proposed.
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PMID:Cold urticaria and virus infections: a clinical and serological study in 39 patients. 395 51

Patients with cold urticaria, a total of 220, were studied in Finland. Sixty-three percent of the patients were female. The diagnosis was based on a positive ice cube test in 90% of cases, and the other cold tests were needed to certify the diagnosis for the remainder of patients. The mean age at the onset of the disease was 25.1 years (range, 1-74), and the mean duration of symptoms was 6.3 years (range, 3 weeks to 37 years). Cold urticaria symptoms had disappeared in fifty-three patients (24%), but there was a recurrence of the disease in twelve. Idiopathic (primary acquired) cold urticaria was present in 96% of the patients. Only two patients had a secondary acquired cold urticaria. Two patients had cold-induced, "cholinergic" urticaria, and four patients had a delayed type of cold urticaria. Twenty-one percent of the patients had dermatographism, 8% had cholinergic urticaria, and two patients (1%) had heat urticaria concurrently with cold urticaria.
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PMID:Cold urticaria. Clinical findings in 220 patients. 407 52

Cold-induced urticaria in a patient suffering from infectious mononucleosis is described. This condition was associated with the presence of cryoglobulins in the serum. To our knowledge this is the first description of cold-induced urticaria associated with infectious mononucleosis.
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PMID:Cold-induced urticaria in infectious mononucleosis. 720 92

Cold-induced urticaria is a form of physical urticaria that develops on cold exposure in susceptible individuals. The majority of cases have an unknown etiology (primary or idiopathic). In rare forms, it is associated with various disease entities (secondary). The workup of a patient includes a history and physical examination, cold challenge, and a battery of laboratory tests. The management of such patients includes precaution and avoidance measures as well as treatment with antihistamines. Life-threatening symptoms necessitate carrying a self-administered injectable epinephrine.
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PMID:Cold-induced urticaria. 1140 59

Cold urticaria is one form of urticaria that may be associated with other forms of physical urticarias. Frequency is generally estimated at two or three per 100. The triggering effect of cold is found at history taking in most of the cases. The urticaria is usually superficial, and more rarely associated with deep and/or mucosal urticaria. The diagnosis is based on history taking and the ice cube test. An exhaustive search for an etiologic factor is often unfruitful, and the presence of a cryopathy should lead to a complete work-up. Therapy of cold urticaria may prove to be difficult. In patients with secondary cold urticaria, underlying disease must be treated in order to resolve the skin symptoms. H1-antihistamines can be used but the clinical responses are highly variable. Short-time treatment with low concentration corticosteroids suppresses the symptoms only partially and temporarily. In patients who do not respond to previous treatments, induction of cold tolerance may be proposed but the procedure is difficult to carry out in daily life over an extended period. Key word: cryoglobulins.
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PMID:Cold urticaria. 1176 2

Cold urticaria is characterized by the development of urticaria, usually superficial and/or angioedematous reaction after cold contact. It was found predominantly in young women. The diagnosis is based on the history and ice cube test. Patients with a negative ice cube test may have represented systemic cold urticaria (atypical acquired cold urticaria) induced by general body cooling. The pathogenesis is poorly understood. Cold urticaria can be classified into acquired and familial disorders, with an autosomal dominant inheritance. Idiopathic cold urticaria is most common type but the research of a cryopathy is necessary. Therapy is often difficult. It is essential that the patient be warned of the dangers of swimming in cold water because systemic hypotension can occur. H1 antihistamines can be used for treatment of cold urticaria but the clinical responses are highly variable. The combination with an H2 antagonists is more effective. Doxepin may be useful in the treatment. Leukotriene receptor antagonists may be a novel, promising drug entity. In patients who do not respond to previous treatments, induction of cold tolerance may be tried.
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PMID:[Cold-induced urticaria]. 1238 50

Old generation H1-type antihistamines are the standard therapeutic option for acquired cold urticaria (ACU), but adverse effects are common. New antihistamines are well tolerated but efficacy is often poor. The present study aims to evaluate efficacy and safety of cinnarizine in the treatment of ACU patients intolerant to old antihistamines and resistant to new drugs. We studied 14 patients (4 males and 10 females). Mean duration of the disease was 48.9 (range 7-102) months. Cold cube test was positive in 78.6 % of patients. Cold urticaria was idiopathic in 10 (71.4 %) patients. Cryoglobulins were detected in the serum of 4 cases (28.6 %). Cinnarizine (25 mg t.i.d.) was administered for 3 months, and then it was gently tapered off and stopped within 2 months. A complete or good response was obtained in 8 (57.1 %) and 2 (14.3 %) patients, respectively. Only two patients were unresponsive (21.4 %). Tapering off or stopping cinnarizine was followed by the relapse of cold urticaria in 7 cases (50.0 %). These patients were amenable to a second treatment cycle. Six patients (42.9 %) had a persistent remission. A patient interrupted the therapy because of severe vertigo. Three patients reported mild and transitory adverse effects including epigastralgia, weight gain and drowsiness. In conclusion, cinnarizine at high doses may be considered as an effective and well-tolerated treatment for ACU.
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PMID:Cinnarizine is a useful and well-tolerated drug in the treatment of acquired cold urticaria (ACU). 1260 83


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