Anaphylaxis

Anaphylaxis is a severe, rapid-onset allergic reaction that can be life-threatening.

  • It is a systemic reaction, meaning it affects the whole body.
  • It occurs when the immune system releases large amounts of chemicals like histamine, causing sudden and widespread symptoms.

🔬 Explanation (How It Happens)

  1. Trigger exposure → Common triggers include certain foods (peanuts, shellfish), insect stings, medications (penicillin, NSAIDs), or latex.
  2. Immune overreaction → The immune system produces IgE antibodies that recognize the allergen.
  3. Massive histamine release → Mast cells and basophils release histamine and other chemicals.
  4. System-wide effects → Blood vessels dilate, airways constrict, fluid leaks into tissues → causing shock, swelling, and breathing difficulties.

📋 Signs & Symptoms

Usually begin within minutes of exposure (sometimes seconds):

  • Skin: hives, itching, flushing, swelling (especially lips, face, tongue, throat).
  • Respiratory: wheezing, shortness of breath, throat tightness.
  • Cardiovascular: rapid heartbeat, drop in blood pressure, dizziness, fainting.
  • Gastrointestinal: nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain.
  • Severe cases: loss of consciousness, shock, cardiac arrest.

🩺 Emergency Treatment

  • Epinephrine (adrenaline) → the first-line, life-saving treatment. Delivered by autoinjector (e.g., EpiPen).
  • Call emergency medical services immediately.
  • Supportive care: oxygen, IV fluids, antihistamines, corticosteroids (to prevent recurrence).

⚠️ Risk & Prevention

  • People with known severe allergies should always carry an epinephrine autoinjector.
  • Avoid known allergens and wear medical alert identification.
  • Work with an allergist for testing and management.

👉 In short:
Anaphylaxis is a severe, whole-body allergic reaction that can be fatal without rapid treatment. Epinephrine is the critical first step, followed by emergency medical care.