Title: Latex Allergy: Diagnosis, Prevention, and Management
1Latex Allergy Diagnosis, Prevention, and
Management
- Tara Hata, MD
- Assistant Professor
- Dept of Anesthesia, UIHC
- March 27, 2001
2History of Latex Allergy
- 1933 Contact dermatitis to gloves
- 1979 Contact urticaria
- 1982 Identified IgE antibodies to latex proteins
- 1989 Anaphylaxis and death from latex exposure
- Association with spina bifida or severe GU
anomalies - 1997 Reports to FDA total 2300 allergic
reactions (225 anaphylaxis, 53 cardiac arrests,
17 deaths) - 1998 FDA mandates labeling of medical products
3Origin of Latex
- Latex is sap from rubber tree, Hevea brasiliensis
- 60 H2O, 35 rubber, 5 protein
- Rubber molecule cis-1,4-polyisoprene
- Chemicals added during production
- Preservatives (ie ammonia), accelerators (ie
thiurams), antioxidants (phenylenediamine),
vulcanizing compounds (ie sulfur) - May elicit delayed hypersensitivity
- Proteins responsible for most generalized
allergies - 7 sensitizing proteins identified to date
4Manufacture of Latex Gloves
- Protein content can vary 1000-fold among lots
- May vary 3000-fold among manufacturers
- Powdered examination gloves have highest protein
content and allergen levels - Cornstarch particles adsorb latex allergens
- Particles aerosolized assoc with respiratory
symptoms - Particles also contaminate clothing
- Lowest levels in powderless gloves that undergo
additional washing and chlorination
5Mechanisms of Exposure
- Cutaneous absorption, ie from gloves
- Inhalation via aerosolized proteins on powder
- Mucosal
- Vaginal/rectal exams, dental procedures, surgery
- Parenteral
- IVs, surgical wounds, severe dermatitis
6Hypersensitivity Classification
- Type I Immediate
- Type II Cytotoxic
- Type III Immune complex
- Type IV Delayed type
7Types of Latex Sensitivity
- Irritant contact dermatitis
- Type IV -- Delayed Hypersensitivity
- Type I --Immediate Hypersensitivity
8Irritant Contact Dermatitis
- Most frequent reaction to latex products
- Sxs/signs scaling, drying, cracking of skin
- Results from direct action of latex and chemicals
- Not a true allergy - no immunologic mechanism
- However breakdown in skin integrity enhances
absorption of latex proteins - Accelerates onset of sensitivity/allergy
- Rx identify reaction, use alternative product
9Type IV -- Delayed Hypersensitivity
- Synonyms T-cell mediated contact dermatitis,
allergic contact dermatitis - Most common immune response to gloves
- Sxs/signs mild to severe dermatitis (itching,
blistering, crusting) appears 6-72 hrs after
contact - Cause processing chemicals in gloves
- mediated by T lymphocytes (not antibodies)
- Rx Identify chemical and use alternative
product - Patients may progress to Type I allergy
10Type I -- Immediate Hypersensitivity
- Synonyms IgE mediated anaphylactic reaction
- Cause proteins in latex
- Antigen induces production of IgE re-exposure
to antigen triggers cascade release of
histamine, arachidonic acid, leukotrienes,
prostaglandins - Onset within minutes
- Varied response local hives to anaphylactic
shock - Rx Antihistamines, steroids, anaphylaxis
protocol - Prevention avoid latex and areas where powdered
gloves used
11Type I Mediators
- Histamine and tryptase release common to type I
and IV - Prostaglandins, leukotrienes, eosinophilic
chemotactic factor, platelet activating factor - potent bronchoconstrictors, vasodilators
- Cytokines released minutes later also cause
inflammatory effects
12Cardiovascular Histamine Receptors
- Heart H1 coronary vasoconstriction
- H2 coronary vasodilation, tachycardia,
inotropy - Arteries H1 vasoconstriction
- H1,H2 vasodilation, hypotension
- Veins H1 increased permeability, edema
- H1, H2 vasodilation, pooling
13Pulmonary Histamine Receptors
- Bronchioles H1 Bronchoconstriction
- H2 Mucous secretion
- Vasculature H1 Increased permeability
14Gastrointestinal Histamine Receptors
- Smooth muscle H2 Constriction, cramping
- Mucosa H2 Acid secretion
15Cutaneous Histamine Receptors
- H1, H2 Vasodilation, increased permeability
- Pruritis, urticaria, angioedema
16Risk Groups for Latex Allergy
- Patients with history of multiple surgeries
- Meningomyelocele or severe urologic anomalies
- Health care workers
- Other occupational exposure
- Rubber product workers, hair dressers, house
cleaners - Individuals with atopy
- Hay fever, rhinitis, asthma, or eczema
- Patients with specific food allergies
- Banana, kiwi, avocado, chestnut, etc.
- Similar proteins
17Myelodysplastic Patients
- Prevalence of latex allergy is 18-64
- Type I reactions more common
- Predisposing factors
- multiple surgeries
- daily catheterizations / stoma care
- presence of atopy is synergistic factor
- Other children at high risk
- multiple surgeries starting in neonatal period
- those with spinal cord injuries
18Health Care Workers
- Typically display a type IV reaction
- Can include conjunctivitis, rhinitis, dermatitis
- 1998 study prevalence of immediate sensitivity
in anesthesiologists CRNAs 12-16 - Over 80 of those sensitized had no sxs yet
- Risk factors hx atopy, skin sxs with latex
gloves, tropical fruit allergies - Progression from type IV to type I unpredictable
19Diagnosis of Latex Allergy
- Clinical history (ask the right questions)
- Myelodysplasia / urologic anomalies
- Multiple surgeries
- Chronic occupational exposure
- Previous reactions to latex products (type I)
- Certain food allergies
- Atopy
- Refer to allergist
- Skin testing
- In vitro testing
20Diagnosis by Skin Testing
- Diagnose Type IV delayed hypersensitivity
- Positive patch test
- Reaction appears anytime from 8 hours to 5 days
later - Diagnose Type I allergy
- Skin prick test using antigens from glove
products - Gold standard
- Positive test wheal and flare (c/t and -
controls) - Sensitivity and specificity around 98
- May result in severe reaction
21Diagnosis by In Vitro Testing
- No risk to patient
- RAST (radioallergosorbent test)
- Measures amount of IgE Ab to latex in serum
- Most labs must send out
- Takes 5-10 days
- Sensitivity 80-90
- Specificity 60-90
- EAST (Enzymeallergosorbent Test)
- Does not utilize radioactivity
- Sensitivity specificity of 80-85
22Prevention of Reactions in OR
- Identify latex sensitive patients
- Medic-alert bracelet
- Signs on hospital bed, room, and OR
- Schedule as 1st start in OR
- Use latex free environment
- For pts with hx of type I or type IV reactions
- Meningomyelocele or urologic anomalies
- Post list of latex-containing devices
alternatives - FDA mandated labeling started February 1998
- Pretreat pts with positive hx
23Non-latex Equipment
- Disposable endotracheal tubes
- Esophageal stethoscopes
- Oral airways
- Suction catheters, Nasogastric tubes
- ECG pads
- Temp probes
- LMAs
24Potential Latex-Derived Products
- Gloves Tape, dressings
- Catheters, drains Tourniquets, elastic bandages
- IV ports, central lines Medication vials
- Syringes Nasal airways, masks, straps
- Breathing bag, bellows BP cuff tubing
- Stethoscope tubing Oximeter probe
- Check labels!
25Avoidance of Latex includes
- Avoiding skin contact BP/stethoscope tubing, IV
tourniquets - Remove stoppers from multi-dose med vials
- Tape latex injection ports on IV tubing, central
lines, IV fluid bags - Use latex free syringes (remember the epidural
spinal trays)
26Pretreatment
- Prophylaxis of anaphylaxis is controversial
- Efficacy unknown
- Anaphylaxis has occurred in pretreated pts
- May mask early signs
- Pretreat pts with hx of Type I sxs
- Start prophylaxis preop and continue x 24 hr
- Diphenhydramine 1 mg/kg q 6 hr IV or PO
- Methylprednisolone 1 mg/kg q 6 hr IV or PO
- Cimetidine 5 mg/kg q 6 hr IV or PO (up to 300
mg)
27Recognition of Anaphylaxis
- Cutaneous
- Urticaria
- Flushing
- Diaphoresis
- Perioral / periorbital edema
- Conjunctival hyperemia
- Lacrimation
- Rhinitis
28Recognition of Anaphylaxis
- Respiratory
- Laryngeal edema
- Bronchospasm
- Pulmonary edema
- Cardiovascular
- Tachycardia, dysrhythmias
- Hypotension
- CV collapse
29Management of Anaphylaxis
- Remove antigen
- 100 oxygen
- IV volume expansion (up to 50 ml/kg)
- D/C or adjust anesthesia
- Epinephrine
- Bronchospasm or hypotension 0.1-5 ug/kg IV
- Cardiac arrest peds 10 ug/kg, adults 0.5-2
mg IV - Antihistamine diphenhydramine 1 mg/kg
H2 blocker optional - Steroids hydrocortisone 1-4 mg/kg
30Again...
- Identify those pts at high risk
- For myelodysplastic GU anomaly pts, as well as
those with hx of type I sxs - Label pt, chart, pt room, OR as latex free
- Use latex precautions
- Prophylax pts with hx of type I reaction
- Be prepared to treat anaphylaxis
31Conclusion
- Most important step is avoidance of exposure in
susceptible patients - With universal precautions, the problem will
likely worsen - Hospitals should strive for low allergen
environments - Powderless gloves with low extractable protein
content - Protect yourself
- Treat dermatitis
- Cover hand wounds with tegaderm