First Aid, Chapter 7 Hypersensitivity Disorders, Urticaria Flashcards
What is the pathology of urticaria? What layer of skin does it involve?What layer does angioedema involve?
Pathologically, urticaria results from the activation of vasoactive mediators, including histamine, leukotriene, and others that lead to dilation and increased permeability of blood vessels and edema in the superficial dermis. Angioedema occurs when these mediators are released in the deep dermis and subcutaneous tissue.
What is the prevalence of acute urticaria?
20% of the population.
What is the prevalence of chronic urticaria?
1% of the population.
What is the typical age of onset of chronic urticaria?
3rd to 5th decades of life
What is the average duration of chronic urticaria?
2-5 years
What percentage of urticaria patients have angioedema?
40%
What categories is chronic urticaria divided into?
- Chronic autoimmune urticaria (40–45%)
- Chronic idiopathic urticaria (55–60%)
What are causes of urticaria? Use the mnemonic.
Imagine that urticaria is like raised maps on different parts of skin, “Itching Maps”:
- Infections: Bacterial (including Helicobacter pylori), fungal, viral, and helminthic
- Transfusion reactions
- Chronic idiopathic urticaria -Hereditary diseases: Hereditary angioedema, familial cold urticaria, Muckle-Wells syndrome (amyloidosis with deafness and urticaria)
- Inhalation or contact with allergens
- NSAIDs and/or drug reactions
- Gut: Foods or food additives
- Mastocytosis (systemic): Urticaria pigmentosa and Malignancy
- Autoimmune urticaria
- Physical urticarias: Different types
- Systemic lupus erythematosus and other collagen vascular diseases
After ruling out acute urticaria and physical urticarias, how often do you identify etiologies in chronic urticaria?
less than 2% of cases.
What is the pathogenesis of CIU?
Pathogenesis of CIU still unclear. More recent studies point to histamine-releasing factors and defects in basophile signaling and/or function.
What percentage of CIU patients have thyroid antibodies?
20%
What are mediators of urticaria?
- Mast cell: Histamine, prostaglandin D, leukotrienes LTC4 and LTD4, and PAF
- Complement system: Anaphylatoxins C3a, C4a, and C5a; histamine
- Hageman factor-dependent pathway: Bradykinin
- Mononuclear cells: Histamine-releasing factors and chemokines
Which cold urticarias do not react to the ice cube test?
Cold urticaria syndromes that have a negative ice cube test: Cold-induced cholinergic urticaria, systemic cold urticaria, and cold-dependent dermographism.
How do you differentiate between cholinergic urticaria with hypotension and exercise-induced anaphylaxis?
Cholinergic urticaria can also present with hypotension and look clinically similar to exercise-induced anaphylaxis (EIA). The key difference is that patients with EIA will not react with passive heating.
How long do you keep the ice cube on for the ice cube test?
5 min