Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0042109 (
urticaria
)
6,569
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Urticaria
is a problem often as vexing to the physician as to the patient. The approach to the patient with
hives
first demands a search for the etiology, whether endogenous and triggered by emotions or occult systemic disease, exogenous and triggered by allergy to inhaled or ingested antigens, or physical and due to abnormal sensitivity to heat, cold, light, or pressure. Often a fruitless search, the diagnostic evaluation must be accompanied by appropriate symptomatic therapy requiring familiarity with the antihistamines and their relative advantages in the various forms of
urticaria
. Elimination diets are of diagnostic as well as therapeutic value: pencillin-free, yeast-free, and salicylate-free diets are particularly useful. Therapeutic trials of tetracycline, nystatin and griseofulvin may be helpful, while corticosteroids and specific desensitization are rarely of value.
J Fam Pract 1975
Dec
PMID:Urticaria. 0 33
The mechanisms, clinical features and management of the various forms of
urticaria
are discussed. The importance of histamine receptors, complement and the kinin cascade are reviewed.
Postgrad Med J 1977
Dec
PMID:Urticaria--current concepts. 2 10
Typical cases of pollen allergen (hayfever, allergic asthma), together with isolated non-respiratory "equivalent" manifestations (
urticaria
, eye conditions, headache, etc.), are easy to detect on the basis of skin tests and the clinical history. Such manifestations may also occur in "false pollen allergy", related in most instances by atmospheric moulds (Dematiaceae), sometimes by house dust or dermatophytes (Candida Albicans, Trichophyton sp), by food or by a bacterial infection or allergy. A combination of pollen allergy and false pollen allergy is common. In cases of false pollen allergy the proportion of negative skin reactions would appear to worsen with the repeated use of prolonged action corticosteroid injections, given on a preventive basis. Similarly, these disorders, initially seasonal, change to more chronic manifestations throughout the year. Desensitization with aqueous extracts of allergens ensured the most complete protection against the causes of pollen allergy and false pollen allergy. Allergen extracts percipitated with alun (semi-retard extracts), more effective than tyrosine adsorbates (Pollinex) have the advantage of offering more rapid treatment without the risk of dangerous reactions. The best therapeutic results have obtained over the course of the last ten years, by the authors, combining on each occasion a semi-retard allergen with an aqueous allergen, thereby acquiring the benefit of the adjuvant effect of the first, in a course of ten to fifteen injections per year. Non specific therapy (antihistamines, cromoglycate, theophylline, etc.) retains all of its symptomatic indications. Oral corticosteroid therapy is better metabolized in the organism and has less of a disturbing effect on the circadian rhythm of cortisol, and is hence to be preferred to injections of delyaed action corticosteroid suspensions.
Ann Otolaryngol Chir Cervicofac 1978
Dec
PMID:[Management in pollinosis and false pollinosis]. 3 22
Paroxystic vasomotor skin manifestations are provoked by various etiologies. Widespread or generalized vasomotor skin manifestations may be induced by a physiological reaction (emotinal flushing), by a drug (vasodilator drugs, antabuse, antidiabetic, sulfonamides), by a discharge of histamine (
urticaria
, mastocytosis) or by an hypersecretion of serotonin (dumping-syndrome, carcinoid syndrome). They may be caused by an endocrinopathy (menopause, hyperthyroidism, hypoglycaemia, medullary thyroid carcinoma, pheochromocytoma, endocrine pancreas, carcinoma). More rarely vasomotor troubles happen in homocystinuria, inhalation of a toxic (trichlorethylen, calcic cyanamid) and exceptionally in some immunohaematologic diseases. Main localized vasomotor skin manifestations observed are dermographism, facial flushing (Sluder's syndrome, cluster headaches, Frey's syndrome, Riley-Day's syndrome) and acral syndromes (Raynaud's phenomenon, erythromelalgia).
Ann Dermatol Venereol 1978
Dec
PMID:[Paroxystic vasomotor skin manifestations (author's transl)]. 8 21
During metabolism studies of radiolabeled proteins in 126 participants four patients were suspected of being sensitive to potassium iodide (Kl) because they repeatedly developed
urticaria
and other symptoms after Kl administration. Two of the four patients suspected of Kl sensitivity and 10 control patients were orally challenged with Kl to document and characterize Kl sensitivity and to evaluate the possible association(s) of Kl sensitivity with
urticaria
, hypocomplementemia, and vasculitis. The Kl challenges in the two sensitive patients precipitated
urticaria
, angioedema, polymyalgias, conjunctivitis, and coryza. One of these two patients also developed a severe systemic illness characterized by fever, headache, peritonitis, episcleritis, and pneumonitis. The four sensitive patients were strikingly similar in that they exhibited hypocomplementemia and dermal vasculitis associated with chronic urticaria or systemic lupus erythematosus, suggesting that other patients with similar clinical features may be sensitive to Kl and that Kl may precipitate severe systemic illness in them.
Ann Intern Med 1979
Dec
PMID:Potassium iodide sensitivity in four patients with hypocomplementemic vasculitis. 51 84
A 28 year old woman with 1 child developed a case of
urticaria
17 days after the insertion of a Copper-T 200 IUD, which cleared up 4 days after the IUD was removed. The same thing had happened 2 years previously when the patient received an IUD. This was due to a rare allergic reaction to the copper in the IUD, which was determined by an allergy scratch test.
Med Welt 1979
Dec
07
PMID:[Allergic reactions against copper containing IUDs]. 54 71
Ninety patients suffering from recurrent
urticaria
were orally exposed to 500 mg acetyl salicylic acid (ASA). 36.6% proved to be ASA intolerant in this group. 26 ASA-positive and 18 ASA-negative probands were selected to take part in an additional provocation test with 8 different food additives (preservative and colouring matters). Altogether 31 tests sheets were exaluated.
Urticarial
reactions were seen after administration of p-hydroxybenzoic acid methylester (5), p-hydroxybenzoic acid propylester (6), benzoic acid (9), sodium benzoate (6), tartrazine (6). Ponceau rouge (5) and indigo carmine (3). Detailed research was carried out on the occurrence of the tested substances. With a diet avoiding salicylates, benzoates and colouring matter 20% of these patients recovered spontaneously and became symptom-free, whilst a further 55% of cases showed marked improvement.
Wien Klin Wochenschr 1979
Dec
21
PMID:[Intolerance to acetylsalicylacid and food additives in patients suffering from recurrent urticaria (author's transl)]. 54 91
One hundred forty-two allergic children aged three to 18 years were studied for evaluation of the usefulness of skin testing with influenza vaccine as a means of identifying those children who could be immunized safely despite their allergies to chickens, eggs, or feathers. One hundred twenty-eight children were fully immunized with bivalent influenza A/New Jersey/76-A/Victoria/75 vaccine. Twelve children had positive skin tests and were not immunized, and two developed positive skin tests after their first injection. One child had
urticaria
8 hr later, one had a nonspecific reaction, and one had a self-limited erythema multiforme reaction eight days after the second injection. All others tolerated the procedure well. History of sensitivity to eggs was not as reliable an indication of vaccine sensitivity as skin testing with vaccine. A negative result of an intradermal skin test with a 1:100 dilution of the vaccine in saline appeared to be a reliable indicator of allergic subjects who could be immunized against influenza without fear of life-threatening acute allergic reactions.
J Infect Dis 1977
Dec
PMID:Safety of influenza vaccination in allergic children. 56 76
From further studies on identification of etiologies in chronic and recurrent
urticaria
, two conclusions stand out: (1) that multiple, differing drugs and chemicals may form a single family group, with cross-hypersensitivity to other substances within the group and (2) that many patients tend to develop hypersensitivity to substances in multiple groups.
Ann Allergy 1977
Dec
PMID:Chronic and recurrent urticaria: new concepts of drug-group sensitivity. 59 78
Four patients with solar
urticaria
induced by visible light developed an urticarial wheal at the site of injection of their own serum, which previously had been exposed to light in vitro. The in vitro-irradiated patients' sera did not produce the urticarial response in normal control subjects. Direct passive transfer studies with the patients' sera yeilded positive results, while reverse passive transfer studies showed negative results. Based on the experimental data, the patients' conditions might be induced by an allergic mechanism in which a circulating photoallergen appears to be an etiologic factor. One of the patients demonstrated an urticarial reaction at the site of injection of in vitro-irradiated normal serum as well as his own serum. The
urticaria
formation was blocked by intradermal injection of epinephrine but not by local injection of antihistamines. The repeated exposures to light had a beneficial effect on wheal formation in all cases.
Arch Dermatol 1978
Dec
PMID:Photoallergic urticaria induced by visible light. Additional cases and further studies. 73 82
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>