Chapter 30 Anaphylaxis
2 How common is anaphylaxis?
Sampson HA: Anaphylaxis and emergency treatment. Pediatrics 111:1601–1608, 2003.
5 What are some of the causes of anaphylaxis related to medical treatment?
Neuromuscular blockers (succinylcholine, vecuronium, atracurium) account for 60% of episodes of anaphylaxis related to medical treatment.
Latex, antibiotics, induction agents (barbiturates, etomidate, propofol) and narcotics (fentanyl, meperidine, morphine) are also important causes.
Colloids, opioids, radiocontrast media, and blood products are implicated less than 10% of the time.
8 What are the clinical manifestations of anaphylaxis?
Anaphylaxis is characterized by the abrupt onset of symptoms minutes to hours after an ingestion or exposure (Table 30-1). The timing, sequence, and severity of symptoms vary. The shorter the interval between the exposure and the symptoms, the more likely the reaction is to be severe.
The oral cavity and throat are affected first, with a tingling or pruritic sensation and edema of the lips or mucosa. Laryngeal and epiglottic edema may develop.
Gastrointestinal signs follow and include nausea, vomiting, and colicky pain.
Skin symptoms and signs, which may be absent in up to 30% of severe reactions, include flushing, pruritus, and urticaria. The urticaria may be localized or diffuse.
Respiratory symptoms, such as stridor or wheezing, may develop in more severe reactions.
Dizziness and altered mental status are associated with hypotension, resulting from effects on the cardiovascular system.
Oropharyngeal: metallic taste, pruritus, and/or edema of lips, tongue, palate or uvula |
Otorhinolaryngologic: congestion, rhinorrhea, pruritus, sneezing, throat tightness, hoarseness, dysphagia |
Dermatologic: erythema, pruritus, urticaria, angioedema, morbilliform rash |
Gastrointestinal: nausea, colicky abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhea |
Respiratory: cough, shortness of breath, dyspnea, chest tightness, stridor, wheezing |
Cardiovascular: faintness, tachycardia, syncope, chest pain, hypotension |
Neurologic: headache, mental status changes |
General: anxiety, sense of impending doom |
9 What is the differential diagnosis of anaphylaxis?
Scombroid poisoning: Develops within a half hour of eating spoiled fish; urticaria, nausea, headache, and dizziness occur.
Physical urticaria: Examples include cold urticaria and cholinergic urticaria.
Near-fatal asthma exacerbations: Can present with bronchospasm and stridor but usually without a rash.
Angioedema: The hereditary form is difficult to distinguish from early anaphylaxis.
Panic disorder: Can present with functional stridor but none of the other symptoms.