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ULY CLINIC

ULY CLINIC

20 Septemba 2025, 01:27:25

Urticaria (hives)

Urticaria (hives)
Urticaria (hives)
Urticaria (hives)

Urticaria is a vascular skin reaction characterized by transient, pruritic wheals — smooth, slightly raised lesions with sharply demarcated erythematous borders and pale centers. Wheals vary in size and shape and result from the local release of histamine and other vasoactive mediators, typically in a hypersensitivity reaction.

  • Acute urticaria: develops rapidly, usually from an identifiable trigger (foods, drugs, insect stings, contactants, inhalants, infections, environmental stimuli, or emotional stress). Lesions often resolve within 12–24 h but may recur in crops for several days.

  • Chronic urticaria: symptoms persist for >6 weeks, often idiopathic but sometimes autoimmune, infectious, or psychogenic.

  • Angioedema (“giant urticaria”): deeper swelling of subcutaneous tissue or mucosa, commonly involving lips, tongue, eyelids, extremities, or genitals; may threaten the airway.


Pathophysiology

  • Histamine release from mast cells/basophils → vasodilation, increased capillary permeability, and sensory nerve activation.

  • Other mediators: leukotrienes, prostaglandins, bradykinin (esp. in hereditary angioedema).

  • Chronic forms may involve autoantibodies against IgE or its receptor.

  • Physical urticarias (pressure, cold, heat, vibration, cholinergic) arise from non-IgE triggers of mast cell degranulation.


History and Physical Examination

History
  • Onset, duration, and evolution of wheals

  • Known allergies; relation to foods, medications, insect bites, latex, or occupational exposures

  • Temporal pattern: seasonal, diurnal, after exertion, or after bathing

  • Associated symptoms: pruritus, angioedema, respiratory or GI symptoms, syncope

  • Past medical history: atopy, autoimmune disease, chronic infections, thyroid disease, GI disorders

  • Drug and vaccine exposure (prescription, OTC, herbal)

  • Family history of angioedema or allergic disease


Physical Examination
  • Inspect skin for number, size, and distribution of wheals; look for angioedema of lips, tongue, eyelids, hands, or feet

  • Assess airway patency, voice changes, and swallowing difficulty

  • Auscultate lungs for wheeze or stridor

  • Take vital signs (BP, HR, RR, O₂ saturation)

  • Examine for systemic signs: fever, arthralgia, abdominal pain, hypotension


Medical causes of urticaria

Cause

Onset

Key Features

Associated Findings

Pathophysiology

Management

Anaphylaxis

Minutes–hours after exposure

Diffuse itchy wheals, flushing, angioedema

Dyspnea, wheeze, hypotension, abdominal cramps, vomiting

IgE-mediated mast cell degranulation → systemic histamine release

IM epinephrine, airway management, oxygen, IV fluids, H1/H2 blockers, corticosteroids

Hereditary angioedema

Recurrent, hours–days

Nonpruritic edema of face, extremities, bowel, or larynx

Abdominal pain, airway obstruction

C1-esterase inhibitor deficiency or dysfunction → bradykinin excess

C1 inhibitor concentrate, icatibant, airway protection

Allergic drug reaction

Variable

Wheals ± angioedema after penicillin, sulfonamides, aspirin, NSAIDs, opioids, vaccines, etc.

May include bronchospasm, fever, eosinophilia

Drug-induced histamine release or IgE hypersensitivity

Stop agent; give antihistamines ± corticosteroids

Food allergy

Acute (minutes–hours)

Hives after ingestion (nuts, shellfish, eggs, milk, soy, wheat)

Nausea, vomiting, angioedema, anaphylaxis

IgE reaction to food proteins

Eliminate food; epinephrine for severe reaction

Physical urticarias

Immediate after trigger

Lesions after cold, heat, exercise, vibration, sun, or pressure

Localized or generalized wheals

Non-IgE mast cell activation

Avoid trigger, antihistamines

Autoimmune / idiopathic

Chronic (>6 wk)

Daily/near-daily wheals ± angioedema

Often no systemic symptoms

Autoantibodies to IgE or its receptor

2nd-gen antihistamines, omalizumab, immunomodulators

Infections (e.g., viral, parasitic, Lyme)

Acute or recurrent

Wheals with fever, malaise, arthralgia

Depends on pathogen

Immune complex or cytokine release

Treat infection, symptomatic therapy


Other causes

  • IV radiographic contrast agents

  • Serum sickness or immune complex disease

  • Parasitic infestations (e.g., giardiasis, helminths)

  • Endocrine disorders (thyroid disease, rarely)

  • Malignancy (rare; e.g., urticarial vasculitis or paraneoplastic urticaria)


Emergency interventions

  • Rapidly assess airway, breathing, and circulation if there is angioedema or systemic reaction.

  • Administer IM epinephrine (0.3–0.5 mg) promptly for anaphylaxis.

  • Give high-flow oxygen, establish IV access, monitor cardiac rhythm.

  • Be prepared for intubation or cricothyrotomy if laryngeal edema develops.

  • Adjunctive therapy: H1 antihistamines, H2 blockers, corticosteroids, beta-agonists for bronchospasm.


Special considerations

  • Apply bland emollients or menthol/phenol lotions to soothe itching.

  • Prescribe non-sedating H1 antihistamines as first line; up-titrate dose if needed.

  • Short course of systemic corticosteroids for severe acute episodes (not for long-term use).

  • Consider leukotriene antagonists or omalizumab for refractory chronic urticaria.

  • Address psychological stressors if relevant.


Patient counseling

  • Educate about avoidance of known triggers (foods, drugs, insect stings, temperature extremes).

  • Recommend medical alert identification for patients at risk of anaphylaxis.

  • Demonstrate proper use of an epinephrine auto-injector and advise carrying it at all times if appropriate.

  • Encourage early medical attention for breathing or swallowing difficulty, or recurrent swelling.


Pediatric pointers

  • Acute papular urticaria: common after insect bites.

  • Urticaria pigmentosa (mastocytosis): rare, causes persistent brownish macules with whealing on rubbing (Darier sign).

  • Hereditary angioedema may present in older children or adolescents.

  • Evaluate for food allergies or viral infections in recurrent cases.


Geriatric pointers

  • Elderly may present atypically or with drug-related hives.

  • Polypharmacy increases risk of urticarial drug eruptions.

  • Monitor for antihistamine side effects (sedation, falls, confusion).


References
  • Buttaro TM, Tybulski J, Bailey PP, Sandberg-Cook J. Primary Care: A Collaborative Practice. St. Louis (MO): Mosby Elsevier; 2008. p. 444-7.

  • Colyar MR. Well-Child Assessment for Primary Care Providers. Philadelphia (PA): F.A. Davis; 2003.

  • Lehne RA. Pharmacology for Nursing Care. 7th ed. St. Louis (MO): Saunders Elsevier; 2010.

  • McCance KL, Huether SE, Brashers VL, Rote NS. Pathophysiology: The Biologic Basis for Disease in Adults and Children. Maryland Heights (MO): Mosby Elsevier; 2010.

  • Sommers MS, Brunner LS. Pocket Diseases. Philadelphia (PA): F.A. Davis; 2012.

  • Wolff K, Johnson RA. Fitzpatrick’s Color Atlas & Synopsis of Clinical Dermatology. 6th ed. New York (NY): McGraw Hill Medical; 2009.

  • Zuberbier T, Aberer W, Asero R, Abdul Latiff AH, Baker D, Ballmer-Weber BK, et al. The EAACI/GA²LEN/EDF/WAO guideline for the definition, classification, diagnosis, and management of urticaria. Allergy. 2018;73(7):1393-414.

  • Kaplan AP. Chronic urticaria: pathogenesis and treatment. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2004;114(3):465-74.

  • Bernstein JA, Lang DM, Khan DA, Craig T, Dreyfus D, Hsieh F, et al. The diagnosis and management of acute and chronic urticaria: 2014 update. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2014;133(5):1270-7.

  • Bingham CO 3rd, Austen KF. Urticaria and angioedema. In: Goldman L, Schafer AI, editors. Goldman-Cecil Medicine. 26th ed. Philadelphia (PA): Elsevier; 2020. p. 1531-5.

  • Zuberbier T, Greaves MW, Juhlin L, Kobza-Black A, Maurer M, Stingl G, et al. Definition, classification, and routine diagnosis of urticaria: a consensus report. Allergy. 2006;61(3):316-20.

  • Powell RJ, Leech SC, Till S, Huber PAJ, Nasser SM, Clark AT, et al. BSACI guideline for the management of chronic urticaria and angioedema. Clin Exp Allergy. 2015;45(3):547-65.

  • Simons FE, Ardusso LR, Bilo MB, El-Gamal YM, Ledford DK, Ring J, et al. World Allergy Organization guidelines for the assessment and management of anaphylaxis. World Allergy Organ J. 2011;4(2):13-37.

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