Anaphylaxis: Difference between revisions
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=Treatment= | =Treatment= | ||
==[[Epinephrine]]== | |||
#1:1000 '''IM''' 0.3 - 0.5mg (0.3 - 0.5mL) every 5 - 15 minutes<ref>Dhami S. et al. Management of anaphylaxis: a systematic review. Allergy. 69 (2014) 168–175. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/store/10.1111/all.12318/asset/all12318.pdf?v=1&t=hrspdbpk&s=8067bfd5903c7ffebf4a274f062a71633ebe0507</ref> | |||
##Give as soon as possible | ##Give as soon as possible | ||
##Always IM initially | ##Always IM initially | ||
| Line 45: | Line 46: | ||
#Pediatric:[[Epinephrine]] 1:1000 '''IM''' 0.01 mg/kg (max 0.5mg) every 5 to 15 minutes | #Pediatric:[[Epinephrine]] 1:1000 '''IM''' 0.01 mg/kg (max 0.5mg) every 5 to 15 minutes | ||
##IV infusion: 0.05 - 1 mcg/kg/min | ##IV infusion: 0.05 - 1 mcg/kg/min | ||
==Supplemental oxygen== | |||
''Consider [[Intubation|endotracheal intubation]] if airway edema present'' | |||
==Normal saline bolus== | |||
##If unresponsive to [[epinephrine]] assume distributive [[Shock|shock]] and give 1 - 2 liters of normal saline | ##If unresponsive to [[epinephrine]] assume distributive [[Shock|shock]] and give 1 - 2 liters of normal saline | ||
# | ==Glucagon== | ||
#1 - 2mg IV over 5 minutes followed by infusion of 5 - 15 µg/min | |||
##If taking beta-blocker AND unresponsive to [[Epi|epinephrine]] | ##If taking beta-blocker AND unresponsive to [[Epi|epinephrine]] | ||
==Also consider== | |||
===Albuterol=== | |||
*for bronchospasm resistant to IM epinephrine | |||
===Antihistamines=== | |||
*only for sympton control (hives, itching) AFTER hemodynamically stable | |||
===Diphenhydramine=== | |||
*25 to 50 mg IV | |||
===Ranitidine=== | |||
*50 mg IV (minimal evidence to support this) | |||
===Glucocorticoid=== | |||
*MAY blunt biphasic reaction | |||
*Methylprednisolone: *125 mg IV (2mg/kg in children) | |||
*Dexamethasone: 10mg IV or PO (0.6mg/kg in children) | |||
=Course= | =Course= | ||
Revision as of 01:47, 29 March 2014
Definition
Anaphylaxis is highly likely when ANY ONE of the following criteria is fulfilled
Criterion 1 (90% of patients)
- Acute onset of an illness involving the skin, mucosal tissue, or both AND at least one of the following:
Criterion 2 (10-20% of pts)
- TWO OR MORE of the following that that occur rapidly after exposure to a LIKELY allergen for that patient
- Involvement of the skin-mucosal tissue (hives, swollen lips-tongue-uvula)
- Respiratory compromise
- Hypotension or associated symptoms
- Persistent gastrointestinal symptoms: (vomiting, diarrhea, crampy abdominal pain)
Criterion 3
- Hypotension after exposure to a KNOWN allergy for that patient (minutes to hours):
- Adults: systolic blood pressure (SBP) <90 mmHg or >30% reduction from baseline
- Pediatrics
- 1 month - 1 year: SBP <70 mmHg
- 1 year - 10 years: SBP <(70 mmHg + [2 x age])
- 11 years - 17 years: SBP <90 mmHg
Differential Diagnosis
- Generalized urticaria
- Angioedema
- Asthma exacerbation
- Anxiety attack
- Acute Coronary Syndromes
- Scombroidosis
- Other forms of shock
Presentation
- Cutaneous symptoms: 90%
- Respiratory symptoms: 70%
- Gastrointestinal symptoms: 40%
- Cardiovascular symptoms: 35%
Treatment
Epinephrine
- 1:1000 IM 0.3 - 0.5mg (0.3 - 0.5mL) every 5 - 15 minutes[1]
- Give as soon as possible
- Always IM initially
- If response to IM is inadequate: give epinephrine infusion 1:10,000 2 - 10 µg/min
- How to make a quick epi drip: Take your code-cart epi (it doesn't matter if it's 1:1,000 or 1:10,000) and inject 1mg into a liter bag of NS. Final concentration is 1mcg/ml. Run at 1cc/hr and titrate to effect.
- Pediatric:Epinephrine 1:1000 IM 0.01 mg/kg (max 0.5mg) every 5 to 15 minutes
- IV infusion: 0.05 - 1 mcg/kg/min
Supplemental oxygen
Consider endotracheal intubation if airway edema present
Normal saline bolus
- If unresponsive to epinephrine assume distributive shock and give 1 - 2 liters of normal saline
Glucagon
- 1 - 2mg IV over 5 minutes followed by infusion of 5 - 15 µg/min
- If taking beta-blocker AND unresponsive to epinephrine
Also consider
Albuterol
- for bronchospasm resistant to IM epinephrine
Antihistamines
- only for sympton control (hives, itching) AFTER hemodynamically stable
Diphenhydramine
- 25 to 50 mg IV
Ranitidine
- 50 mg IV (minimal evidence to support this)
Glucocorticoid
- MAY blunt biphasic reaction
- Methylprednisolone: *125 mg IV (2mg/kg in children)
- Dexamethasone: 10mg IV or PO (0.6mg/kg in children)
Course
- Uniphasic (80-90%)
- Symptoms peak within 30 minutes to 1 hour after onset, resolve within 30 minutes to 1 hour of receiving treatment
- Biphasic (10-20%)
- Uniphasic response, followed by asymptomatic period of hour or more, then return of symptoms
- The second phase does not necessarily resemble the first!
- Possible risk factors
- Severe initial symptoms
- Late administration of epineprhine
- Delayed resolution of initial symptoms
- Little evidence that glucocorticoids blunt a biphasic presentation
- Protracted (case reports)
- Lasts hours to days without resolving completely
Disposition
- Admit: Severe and moderate, especially if symptoms did not respond promptly to epinephrine
- Home: Symptom-free for at least 4 hours
- Send home with an epinephrine autoinjector! (Epi-Pen, Auvi-Q, etc)
See Also
Sources
- ↑ Dhami S. et al. Management of anaphylaxis: a systematic review. Allergy. 69 (2014) 168–175. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/store/10.1111/all.12318/asset/all12318.pdf?v=1&t=hrspdbpk&s=8067bfd5903c7ffebf4a274f062a71633ebe0507
- Brown SGA, Mullins RJ and Gold MS. Anaphylaxis: diagnosis and management, MJA 2006; 185: 283–289
- Ewan PW. ABC of allergies – Anaphylaxis, BMJ 1998; 316: 1442-1445
- Simons FER, Gu X, Simons KJ. Epinephrine absorption in adults: Intramuscular versus subcutaneous injection, J Allergy Clin Immunol 2001;108:871-3
- Lieberman P et al. The diagnosis and management of anaphyalxis: An updated practice parameter, J Allergy Clin Immunol 2005;115;3:S483-S523
- Sheikh A, Shehata YA, Brown SGA, Simons FER. Adrenaline (epinephrine) for the treatment of anaphylaxis with and without shock. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2008, Issue 4. Art. No.: CD006312. DOI:10.1002/14651858.CD006312.pub2
- Second symposium on the definition and management of anaphylaxis: summary report--Second National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease/Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Network symposium.
