Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0042109 (urticaria)
6,569 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 31-old male nurse of anesthesiology was exposed to rubber gloves over a period of ten years. An atopic diathesis was known. From time to time he had episodes of pollinosis. Since nine months he had suffered from conjunctivitis, rhinitis and shortness of breath while wearing latex gloves. During a night shift ten minutes after consumption of tropical fruit (bananas, kiwi) he had to care for a patient in the emergency room. He wore rubber gloves and had to clean the emergency room. Initially, his palms and feet itched. Then he experienced angor and increased perspiration 90 seconds later he suffered severe dyspnea and dysesthesia in the lower extremities. Treatment with theophylline and beta sympathomimetics, steroids and antihistaminics was successful. This male nurse had a positive history for contact urticaria after exposition to rubber. He suffered a dramatic exacerbation when wearing latex gloves and inhaling latex-contaminated air after eating tropical fruits. Fruit could have been a potent booster. Hospital employees with a history of atopic disease should be screened for potential latex allergy before occupational exposure.
...
PMID:[Latex allergy--not only a threatening danger to patients. A case report from an anesthesiological department]. 865 87

The aim of this study was to investigate the involvement of nitric oxide (NO) in the modulation of immediate and delayed immunological and nonimmunological reactions in human skin. The NO donor nitroglycerin, 0.1 microgram, and the NO synthase inhibitor, NG-nitro-L-arginine (L-NAME), 0.1 microgram, were injected intracutaneously prior to provocation tests. The following provocation tests were carried out: 8 patients with pollen allergy to birch were provoked by a prick test with the allergen and the volume of the weals was measured; 20 patients with allergy to nickel were provoked with nickel sulfate epicutaneously; and 26 healthy volunteers were provoked with tuberculin (causing delayed immunologic reaction), benzalkonium chloride (irritant contact dermatitis), UV radiation or benzoic acid (nonimmunological contact urticaria). The test reactions were evaluated by planimetry. L-NAME inhibited irritant contact dermatitis (P = 0.020) but augmented immediate immunological reactions (prick test) (P = 0.016). The other test reactions remained unchanged. Nitroglycerin did not affect any of the reactions significantly. The results suggest that NO is involved in immediate immunological reactions and irritant contact dermatitis.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide participates in prick test and irritant patch test reactions in human skin. 1135 25

Allergic and nonallergic reactions to nitroglycerin occur. The aims of this study were to review the different manifestations of nitroglycerin allergy, to explain how to evaluate for it, and to discuss its treatment. We reviewed relevant literature in peer-reviewed journals, computerized databases, and references identified from relevant bibliographics. Nitroglycerin's most common side effects are headache, facial flushing, head throbbing, fainting, hypotension, tachycardia, and syncope. The majority of reported skin reactions to topical and transdermal nitroglycerin products are irritant contact dermatitis, allergic contact dermatitis, and urticaria. Five cases of presumed allergic reactions to oral, sublingual, intravenous, or perianal nitroglycerin products have been described. Patch testing may be helpful in subjects with skin reactions to topical or transdermal nitroglycerin. In subjects with positive patch tests to nitroglycerin (allergic contact dermatitis), transdermal nitroglycerin patches and other topical nitroglycerin products should be avoided. Most patients with contact dermatitis to nitroglycerin have tolerated oral nitroglycerin, sublingual nitroglycerin, or oral isosorbide challenges.
...
PMID:Allergic and nonallergic reactions to nitroglycerin. 1691 73

An 83-year-old woman was referred to our emergency department with acute urticaria and sudden shortness of breath approximately 30 min after taking rectal diclofenac potassium for lumbago. After treatment with adrenaline and corticosteroids, the patient became hemodynamically stable and left the hospital on the next day. She attended our hospital 1 week after the onset of anaphylaxis because of repeated postprandial epigastric pain. No abnormal lesions were found in endoscopy. Radiographic selective catheter angiography revealed chronic mesenteric ischemia caused by atherosclerosis and abundant collateral arteries between the celiac trunk, the superior mesenteric artery and the inferior mesenteric artery. Patients with chronic mesenteric ischemia usually present with a clinical syndrome characterized by painful abdominal cramps and colic occurring typically during the postprandial phase. Fear of eating resulted in malnutrition. She was prescribed proton pump inhibitor, digestants, anticholinergic agents, serine protease inhibitors, prokinetics, antiplatelet agents and transdermal nitroglycerin intermittently, but these had no beneficial effects. It was most probable that this patient with chronic atherosclerotic mesenteric ischemia was suffering from functional abdominal pain syndrome induced by anaphylaxis. Since psychiatric disorders were associated with alterations in the processing of visceral sensation, we facilitated the patient's understanding of functional abdominal pain syndrome with the psychologist. Postprandial abdominal pain gradually faded after administration of these drugs and the patient left the hospital. Developing a satisfactory patient-physician relationship was considered more effective for the management of persistent abdominal pain caused by complicated mechanisms.
...
PMID:Chronic atherosclerotic mesenteric ischemia that started to develop symptoms just after anaphylaxis. 2275 90