Treatment of chronic inducible urticaria

Author(s):  
Thomas P. Buters ◽  
Willemijn A.C. van der Velden ◽  
Ismahaan Abdisalaam ◽  
Maurits S. van Maaren ◽  
Martijn B.A. van Doorn

2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 211-226
Author(s):  
Elena Yu. Borzova ◽  
Christina Yu. Popova ◽  
Marcin Kurowski ◽  
Maia T. Rukhadze ◽  
Razvigor Darlenski ◽  
...  

Cholinergic urticaria (CholU) is a chronic inducible urticaria, characterised by itchy pinpoint wheals up to 3 mm in diameter, surrounded by a prominent flare, that occur following an exposure to characteristic triggers such as active or passive heating, physical exercise, emotions, hot or spicy foods. Key pathophysiologic mechanisms include immediate hypersensitivity to autologous sweat antigens, functional sweating disorders, impaired acethylcholine metabolism, abnormal skin vascular permeability and disturbed skin innervation. Clinical manifestations of CholU may vary from typical itchy pinpoint urticarial lesions, angioedema to anaphylaxis. Atypical CholU forms include cholinergic pruritus, cholinergic dermographism, cold cholinergic urticaria and persistent cholinergic erythema. The diagnosis of cholinergic urticaria relies on patients history, сlinical manifestations and challenge tests. Treatment options include nonsedating H1 antihistamines in standard or increased doses. The evidence is accumulating for the use of biological treatment with omalizumab in cholinergic urticaria. The prospect of personalized treatment of cholinergic urticaria include autologous sweat desensitization. The main research efforts in ColdU are directed at optimizing diagnostic approaches and developing innovative therapeutic options.


2017 ◽  
Vol 87 (1) ◽  
pp. 60-69 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emek Kocatürk ◽  
Pelin Kuteyla Can ◽  
Pırıl Etikan Akbas ◽  
Mehmet Copur ◽  
Ece Nur Degirmentepe ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
pp. 32-36
Author(s):  
Jeanette Holtzhausen

Urticaria and angioedema are characterized by pruritic hives and sometimes swelling of deeper mucocutaneous layers. Urticaria is caused by release of histamine and other mediators from mast cells. A cut-off of six weeks distinguishes acute and chronic forms, as these seem to differ regarding etiological and response patterns. Angioedema may be histaminergic or due to factors involving the bradykinin pathway. Medications such as ACE-Inhibitors or conditions affecting the C1-esterase inhibitor enzyme are potential causes. Acute urticaria may be related to triggers such as infections, medications or food allergy. When occurring with systemic symptoms and a temporal relationship to food or drug ingestion, IgE mediated allergy could be considered. Chronic Inducible Urticaria (CInd) is suspected on history and may be confirmed by provocation testing where physical and other specific trigger factors elicit the wheals. The term Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria (CSU) is used when symptoms persist for more than six weeks in the absence of inducible factors. A single cause is seldom found but a thorough history and clinical evaluation may elicit trigger factors and associated medical conditions such as auto-immune or thyroid disorders. Indiscriminate food allergy testing is unhelpful, but additive intolerance may be implicated in some cases. Modern non-sedating antihistamines are the mainstay of treatment, and omalizumab or immunosuppressives may be considered for refractory cases. Emotional support is needed as the condition is associated with psychological distress. If there are unusual features, vasculitis, auto-inflammatory or haematological conditions should be considered and skin biopsy or detailed immunological work-up may be indicated.


Author(s):  
Iva Pozderac ◽  
Liborija Lugović-Mihić ◽  
Marinko Artuković ◽  
Asja Stipić-Marković ◽  
Matea Kuna ◽  
...  

2022 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 2-6
Author(s):  
Pelin Kuteyla Can ◽  
Daria Fomina ◽  
Emek Kocaturk

Chronic inducible urticaria (CIndU) is a subtype of chronic urticaria characterized by recurrent itchy wheals and/or angioedema for more than 6 weeks. CIndU has a longer disease duration than chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) and wheals are shorter lasting than CSU. CIndU incudes physical and non-physical urticaria. Triggers and diagnosis of subtypes of CIndU differ from each other. Patient education for avoiding triggers is an important aspect of the treatment of CIndU. There is no significant difference in the treatment approach for CIndU and CSU. In this article, we have discussed different types of CIndU, their clinical features, diagnosis, and management.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Young-Min Ye

Chronic urticaria (CU) defined as repeatedly occurred itchy wheals and/or angioedema for at least 6 weeks. Due to the unpredictability, recurrent and disabling symptoms, and a considerably impaired quality of life, effective and tolerable treatment for CU patients is crucial. Almost a half of patients with CU are refractory to H1-antihistamines, even though the dose of antihistamines is increased up to 4-fold. Recently treatment modulating IgE levels and activities provides an efficient therapeutic approach. Omalizumab, the only approved anti-IgE treatment for chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) patients until now, with a strong evidence of the efficacy and safety, opened a new horizon in the care of the patients whose urticaria is not controlled with antihistamines. Recent international guidelines recommend omalizumab as the first choice of treatment for antihistamine-refractory CSU. However, as it is not curative neither disease-modifying agent, there is a subpopulation of CSU patients responding partly or never to omalizumab. The other things to be solved in the treatment of CU is that clinical evidence is still limited on chronic inducible urticaria (CIndU) and special populations. Thus, a new anti-IgE treatment, ligelizumab is actively evaluated in the efficacy compared with both placebo and omalizumab. Further understandings on the pathogenesis of CU can lead to the development of new mechanism-based therapeutics for CU patients.


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