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

Anaphylaxis is an immediate, life-threatening, general allergic reaction mediated by bioactive substances released by mast cells. Symptoms include diffuse urticaria, gastrointestinal disorders (sensation of fullness, diarrhea and abdominal cramps), bronchospasm, edema, airway obstruction, hypotension, cardiovascular collapse, and even death. The present review discusses the adequate diagnostic and therapeutic management based on our own experience.
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PMID:[Anaphylactic shock. Diagnosis-therapy--emergency measures]. 955 98

Anaphylaxis, a multisystem allergic reaction, represents a true medical emergency. Anaphylaxis is characterized by a combination of the following: urticaria, angioedema, distributive shock, and respiratory failure. Most often, the patient is rapidly treated with prompt resolution of the anaphylaxis in either the out-of-hospital or emergency department (ED) setting. Infrequently, recurrent, or multiphasic, anaphylaxis is encountered, involving a reappearance of allergic phenomena after complete resolution of the original reaction. Recurrence may involve nuisance-level issues such as urticaria; alternatively, multiphasic reactions may be characterized by cardiovascular collapse and/or respiratory compromise. Initially aggressive pharmacological therapy followed by prolonged observation in either the ED or the in-hospital setting is strongly recommended to monitor for potential recurrence.
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PMID:Occurrence of multiphasic anaphylaxis during a transcontinental air flight. 1059 93

A 15 year old female with uterus bicornis bicollis was admitted for operation. She had a history of atopic dermatitis and allergy to buckwheat, raw egg and latex. Two months previously she had developed whole body flushing during dental treatment, and latex glove used by the dentist had been suspected as the cause. Prior to the operation she underwent internal examination and intrauterine echogram in which a latex glove was carelessly used by another gynecologist who had not confirmed her past history. After 30 minutes, dyspnea and urticaria without itching, appeared suddenly. Blood pressure decreased to 80/50 mmHg and heart rate increased to 120 beats.min-1. She was then transferred to our ICU. Methylprednisolone was administered intravenously for dyspnea and circulatory collapse. After 3 hours, the patient made an uneventful recovery. The increased plasma latex protein-specific IgE levels confirmed anaphylaxis to latex. The increasing incidence of potentially life-threatening allergic reactions to latex has caused mounting concern over recent years. We may suspect latex allergy when an anaphylaxic reaction or shock of unknown origin occurs. In hospitals, latex free products must be prepared for use with latex allergic patients and for protection of medical staff with this allergy.
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PMID:[A case of anaphylaxic shock due to latex glove used on internal examination and on the probe of intrauterine echogram]. 1102 62

Anaphylactic shock is a life-threatening allergic reaction with cardiovascular collapse. The cardiovascular collapse may occur suddenly without warning signs or may be preceded by symptoms such as pruritus, wheezing, dyspnea, urticaria, pallor, digestive symptoms, and weakness. Food allergens, injected drugs and hymenoptera stings are the main etiologies. Anaphylactic shock requires an emergency treatment with immediate intramuscular or subcutaneous epinephrine injection. Subsequent avoidance of the inciting allergens is mandatory together with the availability of a first aid kit including ready-to-use epinephrine syringes. Besides its absolute necessity in any doctor's office, such first aid kits should be available in any children's group.
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PMID:[Anaphylactic shock in the infant]. 1114 73

Latex devices release allergenic proteins which are responsible for immune IgE mediated reactions. Casual surgical gloves are most often responsible for contact urticaria. Other allergic manifestations include conjunctivitis, rhinitis, asthmatiform dyspnoea and diverse gastro-intestinal troubles. Cardiovascular collapse and anaphylactic shock are possible. Physicians and the paramedical staff are particularly affected by the allergy to latex proteins. Multi-operated patients and those under prolonged health care using latex-made medical probes also present a high-risk group for this type of allergy.
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PMID:[Latex allergy -- when uncertainty remains the only certainty]. 1133 88

We describe a case of severe anaphylactic shock without exanthema in an 8-year-old boy who was undergoing elective surgery for an ileostomy. The boy had a history of four anorectal operations in the newborn period, but no history of allergies. Sudden, profound bronchospasm and cardiorespiratory collapse occurred 30 min after the beginning of the operation. No signs of exanthema or urticaria were seen. The patient was resuscitated successfully and remained ventilated for 25 h. During this time, he needed epinephrine in dosages of 0.3-0.05 microg.kg-1.min-1. Radioallergosorbent (RAST) tests for the patient were positive Cap Class 3 and 4, and specific immunoglobulin E was highly positive, suggesting a natural rubber latex allergy as the cause of the anaphylactic shock. Ethylene oxide was negative. Eleven days later, a further operation was performed with a strict latex-free protocol in the presence of histamine 1 and 2 receptor antagonists. On this occasion, the intraoperative course was uneventful. Incidence of anaphylactic reactions, prevalence of latex sensitization, special risk groups and management are discussed.
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PMID:Severe anaphylactic shock without exanthema in a case of unknown latex allergy and review of the literature. 1213 98

Idiopathic anaphylaxis (IA) has been described as a clinical entity by North America authors. The symptoms are brisk and relapsing episodes of angioedema, urticaria, bronchospasm, digestive symptoms, cardio-vascular collapse. Adults, females more than males, are mainly concerned. The seriousness is linked to laryngeal angioedema or to hypotension. Nevertheless lethality is rare. The first step of the procedure is aimed at the detection of several rare pathologies mimicking IA: the paroxystic capillary leak syndrome induced by a monoclonal gammapathy or by a release of cytokines, a carcinoid syndrome, cutaneous or visceral mastocytosis, hereditary or acquired deficiency of C1 esterase inhibitor, relapsing benign flushes and factitious anaphylaxis. These diseases being excluded, the diagnosis of anaphylaxis is established, and the diagnostic process searches for exceptional causes: food allergy elicited by unusual trophallergens, exercise-induced anaphylaxis, allergy to parasitic antigens, to inhalants, or hormonal allergy. The negativity of thorough investigations establishes the plausibility of IA. Several unconfirmed pathogenic hypotheses have been put forward: abnormal easiness to non specific release of mediators from mast cells and/or basophils, anti-IgE antibodies as a specific kind of auto-immunity, angiotensin II deficiency. Treatment of emergency relies on self-administration of epinephrine. A daily therapeutic regimen using corticosteroids and anti-H1 drugs is currently prescribed and can be efficient, but no randomized studies have asserted the validity of this management. The lack of immunological studies, contrasting with numerous clinical reports, questions whether IA is really an entity or solely anaphylaxis in search of unknown eliciting allergenic agents.
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PMID:[Idiopathic anaphylaxis]. 1501 47

Deformed wing virus (DWV) is a honeybee viral pathogen either persisting as an inapparent infection or resulting in wing deformity. The occurrence of deformity is associated with the transmission of DWV through Varroa destructor during pupal stages. Such infections with DWV add to the pathology of V. destructor and play a major role in colony collapse in the course of varroosis. Using a recently developed RT-PCR protocol for the detection of DWV, individual bees and mites originating from hives differing in Varroa infestation levels and the occurrence of crippled bees were analysed. It was found that 100 % of both crippled and asymptomatic bees were positive for DWV. However, a significant difference in the spatial distribution of DWV between asymptomatic and crippled bees could be demonstrated: when analysing head, thorax and abdomen of crippled bees, all body parts were always strongly positive for viral sequences. In contrast, for asymptomatic bees viral sequences could be detected in RNA extracted from the thorax and/or abdomen but never in RNA extracted from the head. DWV replication was demonstrated in almost all DWV-positive body parts of infected bees. Analysing individual mites for the presence of DWV revealed that the percentage of DWV-positive mites differed between mite populations. In addition, it was demonstrated that DWV was able to replicate in some but not all mites. Interestingly, virus replication in mites was correlated with wing deformity. DWV was also detected in the larval food, implicating that in addition to transmission by V. destructor DWV is also transmitted by feeding.
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PMID:RT-PCR analysis of Deformed wing virus in honeybees (Apis mellifera) and mites (Varroa destructor). 1629 89

Mast cells possess an array of potent inflammatory mediators capable of inducing acute symptoms after cell activation, including urticaria, angioedema, bronchoconstriction, diarrhea, vomiting, hypotension, cardiovascular collapse, and death in few minutes. In contrast, mast cells can provide an array of beneficial mediators in the setting of acute infections, cardiovascular diseases, and cancer. The balance between the detrimental and beneficial roles of mast cells is not completely understood. Although the symptoms of acute mast cell mediator release can be reversed with epinephrine, adrenergic agonists, and mediator blockers, the continued release of histamine, proteases, prostaglandins, leukotrienes, cytokines, and chemokines leads to chronic and debilitating disease, such as mastocytosis. Identification of the molecular factors and mechanisms that control the synthesis and release of mast cell mediators should benefit all patients with mast cell activation syndromes and mastocytosis.
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PMID:Mast cell mediators in allergic inflammation and mastocytosis. 1693 Dec 89

Hymenoptera are the large group of insects which includes honey-bees, bumble-bees, paper wasps, hornets, ants. Female hymenoptera possess specialized stinging apparatus with which they inject their venom into prey's or intruder's body. It could be life-threatening for people sensitive to the venom. The hymenoptera venom consists of mixture of biologically active substances, eg. enzymes (phospholipases, hialuronidase), peptides (melittin, apamin, mastoparans, bombolitins) and low-molecular-weight compounds (biogenic amines, acetylcholine, carbohydrates, lipids, free amino acids). Several types of reactions are possible to develop after stinging by hymenopteran insects: (1) non-allergic local reaction (pain, small oedema, redness at the site of the sting); allergic reactions: (2) large local reaction (extensive local swelling, exceeding 10 cm, persisting longer than 24 hours) and (3) anaphylaxis (generalized urticaria, bronchospasm, hypotension, cardiovascular collapse, loss of consciousness); (4) systemic toxic reaction (oedema, vomits, diarrhoea, headache, hypotension, seizures, altered mental status); (5) unusual reactions (cardiac ischaemia, encephalomyelitis et al.). Therapeutic management after stings includes removing of the stinger (bee stings), local remedies (ice-packs, topical steroids) and prevention and treatment of an anaphylactic shock (epinephrine, general steroids, beta-mimetics, fluid resuscitation, oxygen therapy). In the present review types of reaction after hymenoptera stings were described with special interest of anaphylactic and toxic reactions as well as therapeutic management after stings.
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PMID:[Hymenoptera stings]. 1772 87


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