Stinging insect hypersensitivity Flashcards

1
Q

How many children have systemic allergic reactions to insect stings?

A

0.4-0.8% of children

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2
Q

What stinging insects cause systemic allergic reactions?

A

hornets, wasps, yellow jackets, honeybees

  • yellow jacket cause most frequent insect reactions
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3
Q

What are 2 types of IgE mediated reactions to insect stings?

A
  1. large local reaction (10 cm swelling or more in diametre)
    - increases in size for 1-2 days, resolves over 3-10 days
  2. systemic reaction to insect sting
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4
Q

How to differentiate bw cellulitis and large local reaction to insect sting?

A
  • only consider dx of cellulitis if there are systemic symptoms (fever)
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5
Q

How do you manage a large local reaction to insect sting?

A
  • Acute Management
    • low risk for systemic reaction, require supportive therapy only
      • oral non-sedating antihistamines
      • cold compresses
      • oral analgesics
      • or brief course of oral corticosteroid
  • Long-term management
    • no IM epi
    • review avoidance with family
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6
Q

What are symptoms of systemic reaction to insect sting?

A
  • symptoms: cutaneous (urticaria, angioedema), GI (vomiting, diarrhea), respiratory (wheeze, cough), cardiovascular (hypotension, syncope)
  • occur within 5-30 minutes after insect sting
  • can occur without history of reaction to stings in past
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7
Q

What is acute management of systemic reaction to insect sting?

A
  • epi 0.01 mg/kg IM - max 0.3 mg in prepubertal child, 0.5 mg in adolescent
  • observe 4-6 hours
    • may need longer for kids at risk of biphasic reaction:
      • delayed presentation to ED
      • needed more than one dose epi
      • received beta-agonist
      • presented with wide pulse pressure
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8
Q

What is long term management of systemic reaction to insect sting?

A

carry epi auto-injector (EXCEPT for those who experience isolated systemic cutaneous reactions)

  • Refer allergist (unless isolated systemic cutaneous reaction when only system involved is the skin)
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9
Q

Who can get venom immunotherapy?

A

positive skin test & history of systemic reaction
EXCEPT if the reaction was skin reaction alone

if history of severe reaction and skin testing negative, serum-specific IgE and repeat skin testing is ordered; if both are negative, the chance of a future systemic reaction to a stinging insect is minimal

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10
Q

How much does VIT reduce risk for future systemic reactions?

A

30 to 5%

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11
Q

How is VIT administered?

A
  • administered over 3-5 yrs
  • increasing dose build-up phase: weekly SC injections
  • maintenance phase: once q4 weeks over 1-2 years
  • Then q8-12 weeks
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12
Q

If someone is anphylactic to yellow jacket and hornet venom, what should they get VIT for?

A
  • cross reactivity b/w yellow jacket & hornet venom - therefore VIT for just one provides coverage for all 3
    • less cross-reactivity for wasp and rare for honeybee
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13
Q

In maintenance phase of VIT, who needs to carry an EpiPen?

A
  • hx near-fatal reaction or systemic reactoion during treatment in cases with severe honeybee allergy
  • elevated baseline serum tryptase level
  • underlying medical condition
  • or for people likely to have exposure
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14
Q

What bloodwork do you do for people who have hx of severe anaphylaxis to insect sting??

A

baseline serum tryptase blood test

Why?

  • implications for prognosis: higher risk for systemic reactions to stinging insects in future and failure to respond to VIT
  • > 20 ng/mL may indicate comorbid condition of systemic mastocytosis
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