Allergic contact dermatitis Flashcards

1
Q

allergy

A

exaggerated rxn of immune system following contact w/ foreign substance

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2
Q

allergen

A

substance that causes or elicits allergic rxn

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3
Q

eczema

A

red, itchy, weepy patches of skin

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4
Q

allergic contact dermatitis risks

A

anyone; atopy (predisposition for allergies)

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5
Q

allergic contact dermatitis happens how?

A

1) sensitiization or induction (first contact); 2) elicitation (develop rash after re-exposure)

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6
Q

How does sensitization to an allergy occur?

A

contact or open skin allows the loss of barrier fxn leading to first contact of allergy

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7
Q

Step 2 of allergic contact dermatitis occurs how?

A

2nd contact w/ allergen leads to memory T cells leading to elicitation of the rash

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8
Q

What are the Sx of acute allergic contact dermatitis?

A

itchy, red, crusting, blisters

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9
Q

What are the Sx of chronic allergic contact dermatitis?

A

itch (+/-); less red; hyperpigmentation; thickened skin; few blisters

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10
Q

Where does allergic contact dermatitis typically affect?

A

at site of contact to allergen

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11
Q

Describe the allergic contact dermatitis as a type IV HSR

A

Sx 24-48hrs later with faster rxns with more exposure leading to rash of 7-14 days with no hives or wheezing

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12
Q

What are distinguishable characteristics of rash from poison ivy?

A

linear pattern with Sx of mild itch to severe itch with blisters

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13
Q

T/F poison ivy can be spread in blister fluid

A

false

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14
Q

How can a person get poison ivy without direct contact?

A

urushiol is present in vines leading to spread by contact or in burning it in the air

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15
Q

What are some common allergic contact dermatitis allergens?

A

CHEMICALS => nickel; fragrances; preservatives; rubber products; topical antibiotics; plants

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16
Q

When should you be careful for nickel allergies?

A

piercing associated with jewelry, metal objects, clothing; medical devices

17
Q

Other than nickel in outside objects, where else is it something to be wary of?

A

dietary nickel

18
Q

What are the recommendations for nickel allergies?

A

avoid exposure to nickel compounds; low nickel diet

19
Q

T/F Allergies to fragrances is 2nd most common allergy

A

true => many different components cause (natural and synthetic)

20
Q

Where can fragrances be found?

A

most personal care products (even those that say unscented)

21
Q

Where do fragrance allergies typically present?

A

face, neck, skin around eyes

22
Q

How is testing for fragrance allergy done?

A

testing through “mixes” that contain many compounds

23
Q

What is widely used in cosmetic, pharmaceuticals, and industrial application to prevent bacterial and fungal overgrowth?

A

preservatives (formaldehyde, parabens)

24
Q

Where are reactions to preservative allergies typically found?

A

site of contact or relatively diffuse with testing needed to detect/confirm allergy

25
Q

What are the types of rxns associated with rubber?

A

1) immediate type rxns to latex proteins (hives, itching, wheezing, anaphylaxis);
2) delayed type rxns to chem additives in rubber products (eczematous rxns)

26
Q

A physician notices an immediate rxn when he got ready to do his procedure. What type of rxn does he probably have? How does it cause it?

A

latex allergy leading to immediate type HSR that can be found in latex glove powder

27
Q

What can lead to bleached rubber syndrome?

A

use of chlorine bleach makes carbamates in elastic more allergenic

28
Q

Topical antibiotics may lead to allergic rxns. What increases the likelihood of this happening?

A

topical antibiotics on open skin (dermatitis) may increase chance of developing allergy;
2 drugs cross reacting;
Rxns confused for infection

29
Q

What is the gold standard for allergic contact dermatitis?

A

patch testing due to dermatologists being able to predict relevant allergens only 50% of time

30
Q

What does prick testing test for?

A

immediate type hypersensitivity rxns (detects allergies in foods, trees, grasses, molds, pets)

31
Q

What does patch testing test for?

A

delayed type HSR from chemicals, metals, preservatives, fragrances

32
Q

How do you treat allergic contact dermatitis?

A

symptomatic relief with cool compresses, oatmeal bathes, calamine lotion; topical corticosteroids

33
Q

What should you avoid in Tx of allergic contact dermatitis?

A

caladryl or product with topical benadryl which is potent sensitizer

34
Q

What is an effective means to avoid delayed typic HSR for allergic contact dermatitis?

A

avoid the causative agent but NO ALLERGY SHOTS