| Literature DB >> 25383135 |
Abstract
Chronic urticaria is defined as episodic or daily hives lasting for at least 6 weeks and impairs quality of life. Two main subtypes include chronic idiopathic (spontaneous) urticaria and inducible (physical) urticaria, but some patients have urticarial vasculitis. "Autoimmune chronic urticaria" implies the presence of histamine releasing or mast cell activating autoantibodies to IgE or FcϵRI, the high affinity receptor on mast cells and basophils. In patients not readily controlled with labeled dosages of second generation H1 receptor antagonists (antihistamines), there is evidence for reduction of urticaria using up to 4 fold increases in labeled dosages. The biologic modifier, omalizumab, helps to reduce lesions of chronic urticaria within 1-2 weeks.Entities:
Keywords: Antihistamine; Chronic; H1 receptor; Immunosuppressive; Omalizumab; Urticaria; Vasculitis
Year: 2014 PMID: 25383135 PMCID: PMC4223736 DOI: 10.1186/1939-4551-7-31
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World Allergy Organ J ISSN: 1939-4551 Impact factor: 4.084
Figure 1There are plaque like erythematous lesions on the legs in a woman with H receptor antagonist resistant chronic urticaria.
Factors associated with longer duration or more difficult to treat chronic urticaria
| Factor | Comment |
|---|---|
| Failure of a single labeled dose of an H1receptor blocker to control chronic urticaria | Explore quality of life |
| Long duration (6 months or more) at time of presentation | |
| Angioedema | Up to 40% of patients |
| Physical Urticaria | Inquire about and test where indicated |
| Autoimmunity diseases/test results* | |
| Positive autologous serum or plasma intradermal skin test (some studies) | Use upmost caution with sera and plasma |
| Serum IgG anti-IgE or IgG anti-FcϵRI | |
| Hypertension | |
| Subclinical activation of the extrinsic coagulation pathway (Prothrombin fragments detected) or evidence of fibrinolysis (D-Dimer > 500 ng/mL) | |
| Basophil activation (CD203c+) |
*Applies to adults but not children for thyroid pathology/autoantibodies.
References for Table 1: [2, 4, 13–21].