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

The ice cube test performed in 24 children (6 cold urticaria, 6 healthy, 6 allergic and 6 chronic urticaria) showed that a 3 and 5-minute ice cube test was the appropriate time for the diagnosis of cold urticaria without false positive results. If the test was prolonged to 10 and 20 minutes, 17% and 33% respectively showed false positive results in chronic urticaria other than cold urticaria patients. After four weeks of cyproheptadine therapy, the ice cube test showed only 17% positive at 3 minutes and 33% at 5 minutes. When the ice cube test was performed for 10 and 20 minutes, 67% showed positive results. In conclusion, the ice cube test should be performed for 3 to 5 minutes to diagnose cold urticaria in children. The time should be increased to 10 or 20 minutes if the test shows negative results at 3 to 5 minutes after antihistamine therapy.
Asian Pac J Allergy Immunol 1992 Dec
PMID:Ice cube test in children with cold urticaria. 130 12

In this study, 142 patients under 12 years of age with the diagnosis of urticaria accompanied or not by angioedema were examined. In all 72.6% of the patients were under 6 years of age. Boys and girls were equally affected, 13.4% of the cases had chronic urticaria, 56.3% had a previous history of urticaria, 88.0% had generalized urticaria, and about half of the cases had associated angioedema. The causes of the urticaria were identified or suspected in 32.4% of the cases. Drugs, foods, insect bites and stings, infections and cold were the most common or associated precipitating agents in that order. Histories revealed 27.5% of the cases had records of other allergic diseases, and 76.1% had allergic diseases in the family. Dermographisms were found in 16.2% of the cases, and 22.5% of cases had eosinophilia. The means of IgE levels in both acute and chronic urticaria were within normal limits, and there was no statistically significant difference between the two groups. Skin testing was of little practical value in evaluating the etiology of the urticaria. Clinical trials of drugs for symptomatic treatment revealed that clemastine, ketotifen and hydroxyzine gave approximately equally high response rates. All these three medications gave significantly greater response rates than chlorpheniramine.
Asian Pac J Allergy Immunol 1986 Jun
PMID:Urticaria in Thai children. 287 23

The study was performed in 6 Thai children with primary acquired cold urticaria. They all suffered from generalized urticaria and two of them also had angioedema. All of them had normal erythrocyte sedimentation rate, complement 3 and negative VDRL, TPHA, hepatitis B screen and cold agglutinin titer. Cryoglobulin was checked in 3 cases and showed negative results A double-blind cross-over study to compare the effectiveness of cyproheptadine and ketotifen demonstrated that the efficacy of cyproheptadine and ketotifen on clinical symptoms and ice cube test was not significantly different (p > 0.05). Both of them showed good results in the treatment of cold urticaria with mild side effects. During the follow up, 5 cases showed complete recovery while the other one developed one or two exacerbations per year upon cold exposure. However, the symptoms were mild and subsided on administration of one or two doses of H1 antihistamine. Our data demonstrated that ketotifen was as effective as cyproheptadine in the treatment of cold urticaria in Thai children.
Asian Pac J Allergy Immunol 1995 Jun
PMID:Cold urticaria in Thai children: comparison between cyproheptadine and ketotifen in the treatment. 748 41

A questionnaire survey was conducted on Food-dependent Exercise-induced Anaphylaxis (FEA) among 11.647 children in 11 kindergartens. Eleven elementary schools and five junior high schools of a city with the cooperation of school personnel. The incidence of FEA was 0% in the kindergartens. 0.06% in the elementary schools and 0.21% in the junior high schools. If severe urticaria is included in the criteria for FEA, the latter appears to be more common than has been reported up till now. The longest intervals between eating and onset of the symptoms, and between the start of exercise and the onset of the symptoms were three and half hours, and fifty minutes, respectively. Therefore, attention should be paid for three to four hours after eating, when children exercise. Since only 31.1% of the teachers had heard of FEA, more information about FEA should be given to them.
Asia Pac J Public Health 1994
PMID:An epidemiological survey on food-dependent exercise-induced anaphylaxis in kindergartners, schoolchildren and junior high school students. 807 41

Sequential skin testing including immediate patch test (IPT), skin prick test (SPT), and intradermal test (IT) with sodium benzylpenicillin G (Pen G), and SPT with benzylpenicilloyl human serum albumin (BPO-HSA) was done in 58 subjects with a history of probable anaphylactic reaction or shock of unknown cause. Based on positive skin tests, the diagnosis of penicillin anaphylaxis was confirmed in 30 patients. The average age of onset of penicillin allergy was 42 years ranging from 20-70 years. The sex ratio was 2:28 with marked female predominance. Anaphylactic shock, wheezing and urticaria occurred in 21, 20, 19 patients, respectively. Most symptoms were induced by skin tests and inhalation. The results of skin tests in these patients showed that IPT with 500 U/ml of Pen G was not only reliable but also safe. It is suggested that patients suspected of penicillin anaphylaxis should received IPT with 500 U/ml of Pen G as the initial diagnostic step; if a negative reaction occurred, then SPT and IT should be applied with the same concentration of Pen G, until a positive reaction developed or all the skin testing showed negative results. SPT to BPO-HSA was safe, but its positive rate was only 47.8% in our study; it seems to be less important than skin test to Pen G. As a whole, the skin testing procedure we recommend is relatively reliable, safe and practical even in individuals extremely sensitive to penicillin. In addition, once the patient develops a positive IPT, Pen G residue on the testing site should be wiped away rapidly and washed out with cool water thoroughly to disrupt further violent reaction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Asian Pac J Allergy Immunol 1993 Jun
PMID:Skin testing in patients with high risk of anaphylactic reactions to penicillin. 821 54

Contact allergy, viz. allergic contact dermatitis, photo-allergic contact dermatitis and contact urticaria, is a well-studied sub-specialty of dermatology in Singapore. Over the years, numerous studies and anecdotal reports on the subject have been published in both international and local refereed journals. This article reviews the epidemiological data on patch testing and photo-patch testing in Singapore. It also summarizes published clinical reports on important contact allergens that are found in both non-occupational and occupational setting.
Asian Pac J Allergy Immunol 1999 Sep
PMID:Contact allergy in Singapore. 1069 61

We conducted a prospective study at King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital, from June 2001 to November 2003, to identify the contribution of food allergy to urticaria in children. During the study period, 100 children with urticaria were enrolled, 36 of whom had a history suspicious of food allergy. Fifteen of 100 patients had fever (9 from upper respiratory tract infections, 4 from diarrhea and 2 from skin infections). A skin prick test (SPT) was positive in 15 of the 36 children who were suspected of having food allergy; 5 patients out of the positive SPT group had anaphylaxis due to food (2 from cow milk, 2 from wheat and 1 from egg). Six patients in the positive SPT group had a negative food challenge test (4 from open challenges and 2 from double-blind placebo-controlled food challenges [DBPCFC]). The other 4 patients of the positive SPT group refused the food challenge test. The parents of a patient who had urticaria from egg refused the skin prick test; an oral challenge test confirmed the diagnosis of egg allergy. One of the 21 patients that had a negative SPT had shrimp allergy proven by DBPCFC. Of the 64 patients who had no history related to food, SPT was done in 27 patients and revealed a positive result in 7 patients, all of whom had a negative food challenge test (4 with open challenge and 3 with DBPCFC). Urticaria from food was found in 7% and was suspected in another 4% of the patients. Severe reactions to food like anaphylaxis may occur. SPT alone is not adequate in making the diagnosis of food allergy; it must be confirmed by a food challenge test. Thirty percent of patients that did not have a history related to food had false positive SPT. Without a history suspicious of food allergy, SPT yields only minimal benefit.
Asian Pac J Allergy Immunol 2005 Dec
PMID:Food induced urticaria in children. 1657 36

IgE-mediated hypersensitivity to buckwheat is common in Korea, Japan, and some other Asian countries. However, buckwheat is not a common allergen in Taiwan. We report a woman with asthma who had anaphylactic shock, generalized urticaria, and an acute exacerbation of asthma five minutes after ingesting buckwheat. The patient underwent skin prick and Pharmacia CAP testing (Uppsala, Sweden) for specific IgE to buckwheat, white sesame and soybean as well as other common allergens in Taiwan including Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus (Dp), D. farinae (Df), cat and dog dander, cockroach, egg white, cow milk and codfish. The patient had a strongly positive skin prick test response to buckwheat and positive reactions to Dp and latex. Specific IgE results were class 6 for buckwheat, class 4 for Dp and Df, and class 2 for dog dander, wheat, sesame and soybean. Results of an open food challenge with white sesame and soybean were negative. Although buckwheat is a rare allergen in Taiwan, it can cause extremely serious reactions and should be considered in patients presenting with anaphylaxis after exposure to buckwheat.
Asian Pac J Allergy Immunol
PMID:Buckwheat anaphylaxis: an unusual allergen in Taiwan. 1713 83

Some cases of chronic idiopathic urticaria (CIU) have histamine-releasing IgG autoantibodies in their blood. This disease subgroup is called "autoimmune urticaria". To date, the autologous serum skin test (ASST) is the best in vivo clinical test for the detection of basophil histamine-releasing activity in vitro. This study aimed to find the prevalence of ASST positive cases in Thai patients with CIU, to identify factors related to the positivity of ASST and to find the clinical implications of ASST in CIU. A retrospective study was performed among 85 CIU patients who attended the Urticaria Clinic at the Department of Dermatology, Siriraj Hospital and were willing to perform ASST, from January 2002 to December 2003. Twenty-one (24.7%) patients had a positive ASST. There was no significant difference between patients with positive ASST and negative ASST as to the severity of the disease (wheal numbers, wheal size, itching scores and the extent of body involvement) as well as the duration of the disease.
Asian Pac J Allergy Immunol 2006 Dec
PMID:Autologous serum skin test in chronic idiopathic urticaria: prevalence, correlation and clinical implications. 1734 42

One hundred patients with acute urticaria were prospectively studied over a 2-year period with respect to etiology, clinical features and outcome, including the patient's quality of life using a Thai version of the Dermatologic Life Quality Index (DLQI). Twenty-one patients (21%) turned out to have chronic and 79 acute urticaria. Itchy sensations had the highest mean DLQI score translating to the highest negative impact on the quality of life. In more than half of the patients, the cause of the acute urticaria could not be identified. The most common identified causes of acute urticaria were infections (36.7%), followed by drugs, foods and insect bite reactions. Among those with acute urticaria, sixteen percent had co-existing angioedema, and one fourth had systemic symptoms, the most common being dyspnea. Patients with extensive wheals tended to have co-existing angioedema and also a statistically significant higher percentage of systemic symptoms, higher mean pruritus and mean DLQI scores than those with less body surface area involvement. Fifty-six percent of the patients with acute urticaria had complete remissions within 1 week; 78.5%, within 2 weeks and 91.1%, within 3 weeks.
Asian Pac J Allergy Immunol 2008 Mar
PMID:Acute urticaria: etiologies, clinical course and quality of life. 1859 24


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