Understanding urticaria and angioedema

Dr Karl Baumgart

writer

Dr Karl Baumgart

Consultant Physician, Clinical Immunology and Allergy; Director of Immunology, Douglas Hanly Moir Pathology, Sydney

Dr Karl Baumgart

Urticarial lesions are usually intensely pruritic welts that can be generalised or localised. They normally last less than 24 hours in the one place, being migratory, and leave no residual marks on the skin. Angioedema lesions may be uncomfortable or sometimes painful and occur in the deeper dermis or mucosa and may take 72 hours to resolve.

Acute urticaria may be allergic, mediated by inappropriate IgE responses to food allergens. It usually occurs rapidly after exposure to the causative allergen: within 30-60 minutes, up to six hours and rarely eight hours.

The most common allergens are either ingested (food or oral drugs) or parenteral (bee or wasp stings or drugs, for example, penicillin). Aeroallergens are not usually the cause of allergic urticaria except when due to grains (in bakers) and latex. However, people who are allergic to grass pollen may develop localised urticaria on contact, for example, when sitting on the grass.

PASSWORD RESET

Forgot your password or password not working? Please enter your email address. You will receive an email with the link to set a new password.

Icon 2

NEXT LIVE Webcast

:
Days
:
Hours
:
Minutes
Seconds
Prof Andrew Sindone

Prof Andrew Sindone

Heart Failure – Demystifying Pharmacological Management for GPs

Dr Rupert Hinds

Dr Rupert Hinds

Iron Deficiency in Children & Young People

Speaker TBA

Speaker TBA

Heart Failure – Assessment and Monitoring in Primary Care

Prof Dave Singh

Prof Dave Singh

COPD Update

Join us for the next free webcast for GPs and healthcare professionals

High quality lectures delivered by leading independent experts

Share this

Share this

Dr Karl Baumgart

writer

Dr Karl Baumgart

Consultant Physician, Clinical Immunology and Allergy; Director of Immunology, Douglas Hanly Moir Pathology, Sydney

Recent Posts

Latest GP poll

We asked GPs "To what extent do you support or oppose legislation to allow nurse practitioners and endorsed midwives to prescribe PBS medicines and provide Medicare services without an arrangement with a doctor?"

Strongly support

0%

Somewhat support

0%

Neither support nor oppose

0%

Somewhat oppose

0%

Strongly oppose

0%

Recent podcasts

Listen to expert interviews.
Click to open in a new tab

You have completed the Educational Activities component of this resource. 

Select ‘Confirm & claim CPD‘ to confirm you have engaged with this resource in its entirety and claim your CPD.

You will be taken to explore further CPD learning available to you.