First Aid, Chapter 7 Hypersensitivity Disorders, Anaphylaxis Flashcards

1
Q

What is the lifetime prevalence of anaphylaxis?

A

0.05-2%

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2
Q

What are the most common causes of anaphylaxis?

A

food and drugs

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3
Q

What are risk factors for anaphylaxis?

A

Atopy - Increased risk for idiopathic anaphylaxis, exercise-induced anaphylaxis, radiocontrast material and latex-induced reactions Note: Atopy is not a risk factor for anaphylactic reactions to medications (PCN, insulin, or muscle relaxants)

Gender: male until age 15, female after that

Route of administration: more severe with IV or IM vs. oral

Intermittent administration: ex, DM of pregnancy with intermittent insulin use

Lenght of admin: ex prolonged antibiotic use (vs single doses)

Time since reaction: the longer the time between administrations, the lower the risk of reaction

Geography: Epipens prescribed more in the north than the south

SES: higher economic groups prescribed epi more frequently

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4
Q

What are the 3 types of anaphylaxis?

A

Immunologic, nonimmunologic, idiopathic

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5
Q

What is the pathogenesis of immunologic anaphylaxis?

A
  • IgE-mediated: Most common; initiated by antigen interacting with allergen-specific IgE bound to high-affinity IgE receptors (FcεRI) on mast cells and/or basophils. Aggregation leads to cell activation, mediator release, and immediate hypersensitivity response. Examples include foods, venoms, latex, and drugs
  • IgG-mediated: Animal models only
  • Immune complex/complement-mediated reactions
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6
Q

What is the pathogenesis of nonimmunologic anaphylaxis? What are some examples?

A

Initiated by certain drugs or events that induce a sudden release of mast cell or basophil mediators in the absence of IgE or other immunoglobulins. Examples include vancomycin, opiates, radiocontrast media, or cold urticaria.

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7
Q

What gender is more frequently affected by idiopathic anaphylaxis?

A

Women

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8
Q

Name all the mediators involved in anaphylaxis.

A

Histamine, leukotrienes, thromboxane, prostaglandins, and platelet activating factor

Neutral proteases: Tryptase, chymase, carboxypeptides, and cathepsin-G

Proteoglycans: Heparin and chondroitin sulfate

Chemoattractants: Chemokines, eosinophils chemotactic factors

Tumor necrosis factor (TNF)

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9
Q

What is the pathophysiologic activity of Histamine, leukotrienes, thromboxane, prostaglandins, and platelet activating factor in anaphylaxis? What are the clinical signs?

A

Pathophysiologic activity:
Smooth muscle spasm, mucus secretion, increased vascular permeability, eosinophil chemotaxis, and activation.

Clinical signs:
Wheezing, urticaria, angioedema, flush, itch, diarrhea, abdominal pain, hypotension, rhinorrhea

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10
Q

What is the pathophysiologic activity of Neutral proteases in anaphylaxis? What is the pathophysiologic activity? What are the clinical signs?

A

Pathophysiologic activity:
Cleaves complement components, chemoattractants for eosinophils and neutrophils, and converts angiotensin I to II

Clinical signs:
Recruits complement, increases blood pressure via conversion to angiotensin II

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11
Q

What is the pathophysiologic activity of proteoglycans in anaphylaxis? What is the pathophysiologic activity? What are the clinical signs?

A

Pathophysiologic activity: Anticoagulation, inhibits complement, binds phospholipase A2, chemoattractant for eosinophils

Clinical signs: Can prevent intravascular coagulation, complement activation, recruits kinins

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12
Q

What is the pathophysiologic activity of chemoattractants in anaphylaxis? What is the pathophysiologic activity? What are the clinical signs?

A

Pathophysiologic activity:
Attracts cells to the site

Clinical signs: Late-phase reaction symptoms, or protraction of symptoms

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13
Q

What is the pathophysiologic activity of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) in anaphylaxis? What is the pathophysiologic activity? What are the clinical signs?

A

Pathophysiologic activity: Promotes platelet-activating factor production

Clinical signs: Vascular permeability and vasodilation, and late-phase reactions

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14
Q

What is the percentage of time of each organ system involvement in anaphylaxis?

A
  • Cutaneous (90%)
  • Respiratory (70%)
  • Gastrointestinal (30–45%)
  • Cardiovascular (10–45%)
  • Central nervous system (10–15%)
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15
Q

What is the diagnostic criterion 1 for anaphylaxis? Why is criterion 1 the most useful?

A

Acute onset of symptoms (minutes to hours) with skin and/or mucosal involvement (Generalized hives, pruritus, Angioedema, flushing)

Plus at least 1 of the following:
Respiratory compromise (dyspnea, wheeze, hypoxemia) Decrease in BP or end-organ dysfunction (hypotonia, syncope) 

Skin findings most common presenting symptom of anaphylaxis (~90%). Therefore criterion 1 is the most useful for diagnosis

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16
Q

What is the diagnostic criterion 2 for anaphylaxis? What percentage of patients are skin manifestations absent or unrecognized in?

A

Acute onset of symptoms (minutes to hours) after exposure to a likely allergen for that patient

Plus 2 or more of the following:
Skin/mucosal involvement Respiratory compromise Decreased BP Gastrointestinal symptoms (abdominal pain, vomiting)

Skin findings absent or unrecognized in ~20% of anaphylactic episodes. Therefore criterion 2 includes symptoms from other organ systems in patients with exposure to a likely allergen.

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17
Q

What is the diagnostic criterion 3 for anaphylaxis? How many organ systems are involved?

A

Acute decrease in BP (minutes to hours) after exposure to a known allergen for that patient

Adults: Systolic 30% decrease from baseline Infants/children: Age-specific low systolic BP or >30% decrease from baseline

Criterion 3 is used to detect anaphylactic reactions in patients exposed to a known allergen when only one organ system is involved.

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18
Q

How often do biphasic reactions occur in anaphylaxis? What is the time frame? How long should a patient be observed after a reaction? What is the most likely agent to cause biphasic anaphylaxis?

A

20%. Most occur within 10 hours after resolutation of the primary event, but can be observed up to 72 hours later. Some advocate 24 hour observation, but 8 hours is sufficient for most reactions. Foods are most likely to cause biphasic anaphylaxis.

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19
Q

How long can protracted anaphylaxis last?

A

Anaphylactic reaction that lasts for hours, days, or even weeks in extreme cases

20
Q

What are the physiological attempts to correct hypotension in anaphylaxis?

A

The synthesis and release of epinephrine (adrenal gland) and endothelin (endothelium), activation of the renin-angiotensin axis, and the release of norepinephrine (ganglia).

21
Q

What drugs might interfere with the body’s physiologic compensatory mechanisms to anaphylaxis?

A

Beta blockers, ACE I, ARBs?, TCAs, MAOIs.

22
Q

How do beta blockers interfere with compensatory mechanisms in anaphylaxis? Are they allowed in IT?

A

Interfere with normal compensatory tachycardia and blunt the effect of epinephrine. Relative contraindication to immunotherapy

23
Q

How do ACE I interfere with compensatory mechanisms in anaphylaxis? Are they allowed in IT?

A

Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEIs): Theoretical increased risk in venom immunotherapy, because it acts at two sites (no data supports its cessation in pollen immunotherapy):
o Blocks conversion of angiotensin I to angiotensin II
o Inhibits the same enzyme that destroys kinins, which are known to be active in anaphylactic episodes

24
Q

How do TCAs affect treatment of anaphylaxis?

A

Exaggerate the response to epinephrine by preventing the reuptake of catecholamines at ganglionic sites

25
Q

How do MAOIs affect treatment of anaphylaxis?

A

Prevent degradation of epinephrine systemically

26
Q

What is the ratio of total tryptase to mature in anapylaxis from mastocytosis vs. other forms?

A

Recall that the ratio of total tryptase (proβ+mature) to mature tryptase is helpful in distinguishing anaphylaxis in mastocytosis from other forms: Total/mature >20 = mastocytosis;

27
Q

What are the labs are elevated in anaphylaxis? When should they be checked? When does each finding peak and how long does it remain elevated?

A

serum histamine, urinary histamine, serum tryptase, PAF

  • Check serum histamine 15–60 minutes: Levels begin to rise by 5 minutes but remain elevated only 30–60 minutes.
  • Check urinary histamine: Metabolites may remain elevated as long as 24 hours.
  • Check serum tryptase 15–180 minutes: Peaks 60–90 minutes after the onset of symptoms and can remain elevated as long as 5 hours.
  • Platelet-activating factor (PAF): Recent studies suggest that PAF levels more accurately correlate with anaphylaxis severity scores than either histamine or tryptase levels
28
Q

What is the dose of epineprhine for anaphylaxis?

A

0.01 mg/kg IM (often as 0.3–0.5 mL of 1:1000)

29
Q

What is the immediate treatment for anaphylaxis?

A
  • Epinephrine at dose of 0.01 mg/kg intramuscularly (often as 0.3–0.5 mL of 1:1000)
  • ABCs, supine positioning, and establishment of an airway
  • Skin inspection
  • Supplemental oxygen, insertion of one or more large-bore IVs for fluids
  • Even if on β blockers, administer epinephrine first but consider glucagon. (Also, recall IV fluids are particularly important for patients unresponsive to epinephrine)
30
Q

What is the treatment for radiocontrast, cold, and fluorescein-related anaphylaxis? What is the risk of reaction after you do this?

A

A common protocol consists of 50 mg prednisone 13, 7, and, 1 hour before the procedure, with 50 mg of diphenhydramineone 1 hour before the procedure, along with the use of low osmolar contrast material. This intervention has been shown to lower the risk for reaction to less than 1%.

31
Q

What does each type of histamine receptor cause in anaphylaxis?

A

H1: Coronary artery constriction, bronchoconstriction, systemic vasodilation, increased capillary permeability, tachycardia, pruritus, rhinorrhea

H2: Coronary artery vasodilation, increase force and rate of atrial and ventricular contractions, increased capillary permeability, increase secretion of mucus

H3: Autonomic receptor downregulator (prevents release of additional epinephrine from autonomic ganglion, leads to heightened hypotension)

H4: The histamine H4 receptor is the most recently identified in the histamine receptor family and in murine models may be involved in pruritus, chemotaxis, and mast cell cytokine release.

32
Q

Name the common causes of perioperative anaphylaxis.

A
  • Neuromuscular blocking agents (NMBAs)
  • Hypotonic induction agents (barbiturates)
  • Antibiotics
  • Opioids
  • Latex
  • Colloids
33
Q

What are risk factors for perioperative anaphylaxis?

A

Asthma
female sex
atopy
multiple past surgeries mast cell disorders

34
Q

What form of anaphylaxis carries to highest mortality rate? Why?

A

Perioperative anaphylaxis due to impaired early recognition (surgical drapes obscuring view, inability of patient to report symptoms), additional stress of surgery/illness, and IV administration of medications.

35
Q

What lab markers suggest anaphylaxis?

A

Elevated serum total tryptase, plasma histamine, or histamine metabolites in the urine.

36
Q

How long anaphylaxis should you wait to skin test to agents?

A

4-6 weeks.

37
Q

What is natural rubber latex (NRL) made from?

A

Cytoplasmic exudate of the Hevea brasiliensis tree.

38
Q

Who is at risk of developing a latex allergy?

A

Health care workers and patients who use latex-containing medical devices. Risk is directly related to duration of exposure and cumulative use of latex-containing products.

39
Q

How can people who don’t wear latex gloves be sensitized otherwise?

A

Cornstarch powder in latex gloves absorbs allergens and acts as an airborne vehicle to sensitize nearby people by inhalation.

40
Q

Why do dipped rubber products cause more reactions? What are some examples?

A

Dipped rubber products (gloves, condoms, balloons) cause most reactions because these are heat-vulcanized at lower temperatures and have more proteins intact.

41
Q

What are the major latex protein allergens in spina bifida? Who is less likely to be sensitized to them? What is a characteristic of the protein?

A

Hev b 1 and 3 are less water-soluble and are more commonly identified as allergens in sensitized patients with spina bifida, but are minor in vivo allergens in health care workers.

42
Q

What latex proteins do healthccare workers most frequently react to?

A

Health care workers react most frequently to Hev b 5, 6, and 7.

43
Q

Which latex protein sensitizations correlate with which food sensitizations?

A

-Hev b 2 β-1 and 3-glucosidase Defense-related protein Bell pepper, olive
-Hev b 5 Acidic protein Kiwi, potato, and sugar beet
-Hev b 6 Hevein and prohevein proteins
Defense-related protein (latex coagulation)
Avocado, banana, chestnut, sweet pepper
-Hev b 7 Patatin-like proteins Defense-related protein or inhibitor of biosynthesis
Potato and tomato
-Hev b 13 Latex esterase Potato

44
Q

How is latex allergy diagnosed? What is the sensitivity and specificity?

A

Identification of NRL-specific IgE associated with symptoms that are consistent with IgE-mediated reactions to latex protein allergens. There are no standardized skin test extracts. The in vitro assays have wide ranges of sensitivity (73–92%) and specificity (73–97%).

45
Q

In Food-dependent exercise-induced anaphylaxis, what are associated foods? What are the most common foods that trigger it?

A
  • Crustaceans
  • Cephalopods
  • Celery
  • Grapes
  • Chicken
  • Wheat
  • Buckwheat
  • Tomato
  • Dairy product
  • Mushrooms
46
Q

Is food dependent exercise-induced anaphylaxis more common with any food or specific foods?

A

More common with specific foods.

47
Q

What is the management of food dependent exercise induced anaphylaxis?

A

Management of food-dependent EIA includes avoiding exercising in proximity (4–6 hr) to food consumption, carrying self-injectable epinephrine, exercising with a partner, and wearing a medical alert bracelet.