Title: Anaphylaxis
1Anaphylaxis
- Peter Mack
- October 31, 2007
2Hypersensitivity Responses
- 1975 - Gell Coombs described a scheme for
classifying immune responses which function as
protective mechanisms - However, these immune pathways can react
inappropriately to produce a hypersensitivity or
allergic response - Hypersensitivity reaction I - IV
3Type I
- Anaphylactic (immediate - type)
- Physiologically active mediators are released
from mast cells basophils - Triggered by antigen binding to IgE antibodies on
the membranes of these cells - Eg. Anaphylaxis, allergic rhinitis
4Type I
- Cross-linkage of two IgE induce degranulation
- Complement independent
5Type II (Cytotoxic Reactions)
- Antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxic
hypersensitivity - IgG IgM directed against antigens on foreign
cells - Antigens can be integral membrane components
(ABO) or haptens that absorb to cell surfaces
(AIHA)
6Type II
- Cell damage produced by
- Direct cell lysis after complete compliment
cascade activation - Increased phagocytosis by macrophages
- Killer T-cell lymphocyte producing Ab-dependent
cell-mediated cytotoxic effects - Eg. ABO incompatibility, HIT
7Type II
- Complement
- activation
- Targeted cell
- destruction
8Type III
- Circulation, soluble antigens antibodies that
bind to form insoluble complexes that deposit in
the microvasculature - Complement is activated neutrophils localize to
the site produce tissue damage - Eg. Serum sickness after snake antisera
9Type III
Basement membrane
Endothelium
Antigen
Vasculitis, Increased capillary permeability
Complement
IgG
PMN
10Type IV
- Delayed hypersensitivity reactions
- Interaction of sensitized lymphocytes with
specific antigens (antibody independent) - Manifests 18-24h, peak 40-80h, disappears 72-96h
11Type IV
- Antigen-lymphocyte binding produces
- Lymphokine synthesis
- Lymphocyte proliferation
- Generation of cytotoxic T-cells
- Attraction of macrophages
- Cytotoxic T-cells specifically kill target cells
that bear antigens identical to those that
triggered the reaction
12Type IV
Eg. Graft-versus-host, contact dermatitis
13Intraoperative Allergic Reactions
- 15,000 - 125,000 anesthetics
- 3.4 mortality
- gt90 evoked by IV drugs occurs within 5 minutes
- Anaphylaxis is the most feared, with circulatory
collapse, reflecting vasodilation decreased
venous return
14Definitions
- Anaphylaxis (Portier Richet)
- ana - against
- prophylaxis - protection
- Profound shock subsequent death in dogs after
2nd challenge with a foreign antigen - Mediated by antibodies
15Definitions
- Anaphylactoid
- When antibodies are not responsible for the
reaction, or their involement cannot be proven - Cannot be distinguished from one
- another on the basis of clinical
- observation
16Recognition of Anaphylaxis During
Regional and General Anesthesia
17Anaphylactic ReactionsIgE-mediated
pathophysiology
- Antigen binding to IgE initiates the reaction
- Prior exposure to the antigen (or substance of
similar structure) is required for sensitization - Allergic history may be unknown
18Anaphylactic Reactions IgE-mediated
pathophysiology
- On re-exposure, antigen binds to bridges two
immunospecific IgE Abs located on the surface of
mast cells of basophils - Liberates stored mediators
- Histamine, tryptase, chemotactic factors
19Anaphylactic ReactionsIgE-mediated
pathophysiology
- Arachadonic acid metabolites (leukotrienes,
prostaglandins) - Kinins cytokines
- Synthesized released in response to cellular
activation
20Anaphylactic ReactionsIgE-mediated
pathophysiology
- Bronchospasm, upper airway edema
- Vasodilation, increased capillary permeability
- Urticaria
- Challenge in sensitized individuals usually
produces immediate clinical manifestations
21Clinical Mediators
- Histamine (H1, H2, H3 receptors)
- H1 - releases NO from vascular endothelium,
increases capillary permeability, contracts
airways vascular smooth muscle - H2 - gastric secretions, inhibits mast cell
activation, contributes to vasodilation
22Histamine
- Undergoes rapid metabolism by histamine
N-methyltransferase diamine oxidase located in
endothelial cells
23Peptide Mediators
- Factors that cause granulocyte migration
(chemotaxis) collection at the site of
inflammatory stimulus - Eosinophilic chemotactic factor of anaphylaxis
(ECF-A) - Draws eosinophils, but role is uncertain as
eosinophils release enzymes that can inactivate
histamine leukotrienes
24Arachadonic Acid Metabolites
- Leukotrienes prostaglandins are both
synthesized after activation of mast cells - Metabolism of phospholipid membranes via
lipoxygenase or cyclo-oxygenase
25Leukotrienes
- C4, D4, E4
- Slow reacting
- Bronchoconstriction (gt histamine)
- Increased capillary permeability
- Vasodilation
- Coronary vasoconstriction
- Myocardial depression
26Prostaglandins
- PG D2
- Vasodilation
- Bronchospasm
- Pulmonary hypertension
- Increased capillary permeability
27Kinins
- Vasodilation
- Increased capillary permeability
- Bronchoconstriction
- Stimulates vascular endothelium to release
vasoactive factors - Prostacyclin, NO
28Platelet-Activating Factor
- Synthesized in activated mast cells
- Extremely potent
- Causes platelets to aggregate and release
inflammatory products - PAF causes profound wheal-and-flare response,
smooth muscle contraction increase capillary
permeability
29Non-IgE-Mediated Reactions
- Other immunologic non-immunologic mechanisms
liberate many of the same mediators producing
clinically identical syndromes
30Complement
- activation follows both immunologic
(Ab-mediated, i.e., classic pathway) or
nonimmunologic (alternative) pathways to include
a series of multimolecular, self-assembling
proteins that liberate biologically active
complement fragments of C3 C5
31Complement
- C3a C5a anaphylatoxins
- Release histamine, contract smooth muscle,
increase capillary permeability and stimulate
interleukin synthesis
32Complement
- C5a interacts with specific high-affinity
receptors on PMNs platelets initiating
leukocyte chemotaxis, aggregation activation
33Complement
- Aggregated leukocytes embolized to various
organs, producing microvascular occlusion
liberation of inflammatory mediators such as
arachadonic acid metabolites, O2 free radicals
lysosomal enzymes
34Nonimmunologic Release of Histamine
- Many molecules administered in the perioperative
period release histamine in a dose-dependent,
nonimmunologic fashion - Mechanism not fully understood
- Involves selective mast cell basophil
activation - Cutaneous mast cells are the only cell population
that releases histamine in response to drugs
endogenous stimuli
35Drugs Capable of Nonimmunologic Histamine Relsease
- Antibiotics (Vancomycin)
- Basic compounds
- Hyperosmotic agents
- Muscle relaxants (d-turbocurarine, atracurium,
mivacurium) - Opioids (morphine, meperidine, codeine)
- Thiobarbiturates
36Treatment Plan
Hypoxia Hypotension 2 to
Vasodilation Increased capillary permeability
Bronchospasm
Airway Maintenance 100 O2
Intravascular volume expansion Epinephrine
37Treatment Plan
- Titrated to desired effect with careful
monitoring - Reactions can be protracted requiring aggressive
therapy - Manifestations may recur after successful
treatment - ? monitor in ICU x 24h
38Watch for
- Persistent hypotension
- Pulmonary hypertension
- Lower respiratory obstruction
- Laryngeal obstruction
- May continue for 5-32h despite vigorous therapy
39Managment of Anaphylaxis During General
Anesthesia
40Initial Therapy
- Stop of limit further antigen administration
- Maintain airway administer 100 O2
- Profound V/Q mismatch can accompany anaphylaxis
- ABGs may be useful to follow
41Initial Therapy
- D/C all anesthetic drugs
- Vapours are not the bronchodilator of choice
after anaphylaxis - Worsen hypotension
- Interfere with bodys compensatory response to CV
collapse
42Initial Therapy
- Volume expansion
- Hypovolemia (up to 40 loss of intravascular
fluid into interstitial space) - 2-4 L crystalloid/ colloid initially (an
additional 25-50 ml/kg may be necessary) - Refractory hypotension ? additional monitoring
- TEE can assess intravascular volume, ventricular
function any other occult cause of CV
dysfunction - Useful to guide therapy
- Fulminant noncardiogenic pulmonary edema
- Require intravascular volume repletion with
careful hemodynamic monitoring until capillary
dysfunction improves
43Initial Therapy
- Epinephrine
- Drug of choice
- ? - adrenergic combats hypotension
- ?2 causes bronchodilation inhibits mediator
release by ?cAMP in mast cells basophils - Route dose depend on patients condition
- Rapid timely as pts under GA may have altered
sympathoadrenergic responses, whereas pts under
regional may be partially sympathectomized
require larger doses
44Initial Therapy
- Epinephrine
- 50-100 ?g bolus
- Titrated to restore BP along with additional
volume - Complete CV collapse (0.1-1 mg)
- Laryngeal edema (w/o hypotension) may give sc
45Secondary Treatment
- Antihistamine
- 0.5-1.0 mg/kg diphenhydramine (H1)
- Does not inhibit the reaction, or release of
histamine - Competes for receptor sites
- H2 antagonists remain unclear
46Catecholamines
- Epinephrine infusions for persistent hypotension
or bronchospasm - 0.05-0.1?g/kg/min (5-10?g/min) titrate to
correct BP - Norepinephrine may also be useful in refractory
hypotension 2? ?SVR - 0.05-0.1?g/kg/min (5-10?g/min)
47Aminophylline
- Nonspecific phosphodiesterase inhibitor
- Bronchodilates ? histamine release from MC
Bs by ? cAMP - ? contractility ? pulmonary vascular resistance
- Persistent bronchospasm hemodynamic stability
- IV loading dose 5-6 mg/kg over 20 min
- 0.5-0.9 mg/kg/hr
48Corticosteroids
- Anti-inflammatory
- 12-24h for effect
- 0.25-1g IV hydrocortisone in IgE-mediated
reactions - 1-2g IV methylprednisolone in complement-mediated
- Eg. Pulmonary vasocontriction after protamine
- May attenuate late-phase reactions
49Bicarbonate
- Acidosis develops quickly
- Diminishes effect of epinephrine
- Refractory hypotension acidosis
- 0.5-1 mEq/kg q5min
- Follow ABGs
50Airway Evaluation
- Laryngeal edema may occur
- Suggested by facial edema
- Leave intubated until edema subsides
- Air leak useful for patency
- Consider direct laryngoscopy
51Perioperative Management
- Allergic drug reactions account for 6-10 of all
adverse reactions - The risk of an allergic drug reactions 1-3 for
most drugs - 5 of adults (1 or more drugs)
- 15 of adults believe they are allergic to
specific drugs
52Adverse Drug Reactions
- Predictable ADR account for 80 of all reactions
- Dose dependent
- Known pharmacologic action
- Most serious, predictable ADR are toxic
directly related to dose (OD)
53Adverse Drug Reactions
- Side effects are the most common adverse drug
reaction and are undesirable pharmacologic
actions of the drugs at usual prescribed dosages.
54Unpredictable ADRs
- Not dose dependent
- Not related to pharmacologic actions
- Immunologic response of the individual
- Proving the immunologic mechanism may be a
challenge
55Unpredictable ADRs
- Occur only in a small percentage of pts receiving
the drug - Clinical manifestations do not resemble known
pharmacologic actions
56Unpredictable ADRs
- In the absence of prior drug exposure, allergic
symptoms rarely appear - After sensitization the reaction can occur
rapidly on re-exposure
57Immunologic Mechanisms
- All 4 mechanisms
- Eg. Penicillin - different reaction in different
pts or spectrum in same pt - In the same pt - anaphylaxis (I), hemolytic
anemia (II), serum sickness (III), contact
dermatitis (IV) - Any one antigen can produce a diffuse spectrum of
responses
58(No Transcript)
59Anesthetic Drugs
- Nearly all have been implicated
- Muscle relaxants top the list
- Cross-sensitivity between succinylcholine NDNMB
- Quaternary ammonium
- Alternates should not be chosen without testing
60Anesthetic Drugs
- Life threatening reactions are more likely to
occur in patients with a history of allergy,
atopy or asthma - Does not mandate further testing, pretreatment or
avoidance of specific drugs
61Evaluation
- Identification can be difficult
- Circumstantial evidence of temporal connection
- in vitro in vivo methods are uncommon
- Direct challenge (obvious hazards)
- Drug-specific IgE
62Testing
- No testing avoidance
- One drug clear temporal correlation
- Necessary
- Many drugs are given
- Preservatives
63Leukocyte Histamine Release
- Incubate pts leukocytes with offending drug
measure histamine release as a marker for
basophil activation - False positives
- Difficult to perform
64Radioallergosorbant Test (RAST)
- in vitro detection of specific IgE directed
towards particular antigens - Pt serum exposed to antigen, a complex forms if
specific IgE present - Concentration is calculated (more quantitative
than skin testing)
65RAST
- Avoids re-exposure
- Limited by commercial availability of
drug-specific antigens - False positives (pts with elevated IgE levels)
- Meperidine, succinylcholine, thiopental
66Enzyme-linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA)
- Similar to RAST
- Useful for protamine
67Intradermal Testing
- Most common method
- Demonstrate wheal-and-flare
- Simple, safe, useful
- Requires re-exposure
68Latex
- Important cause of peri-operative anaphylaxis
- Sap from the tree Hevea brasiliensis (Rubber
tree) - 1979 - 1st case, contact dermatitis
- 1989 - intraoperative anaphylaxis
- 1991 - FDA Dear Colleague
69Latex - Risk Factors
- Health care workers
- Children with spina bifida
- Frequent catheterizations
- Foods (bananas, avocados, kiwis)
- Atopy
70Latex
- 24 incidence of contact dermatitis
- Early stage of sensitization ? avoidance
- 12.5 incidence of latex-specific IgE positivity
in anesthesiologists - If proven strict avoidance is essential
- Avoidance of anitgen exposure is the best
preventative therapy - Pretreatment is of little use
71Summary
- 4 types of hypersensitivities
- 3 involve antibodies
- Anaphylaxis mediated by IgE
- Anaphylactoid is Ab independent
72Summary
- Anaphylaxis
- Bronchospasm
- Vasodilation, increased capillary permeability
- Urticaria
- Associated with profound CV collapse
73Summary
- Chemical mediators
- Histamine
- Leukotrienes Prostaglandins
- Kinins
- Platelet-activating Factor
- Complement
74Summary
- Management
- ABCs
- Volume expansion
- Epinephrine
- Antihistamines, steroids, infusions
75Summary
- Muscle relaxants
- Antibiotics
- Blood products
- Latex
- Colloids
76Summary
- Testing
- Leukocyte Histamine Release
- RAST
- ELISA
- Skin testing
77References
- Barash P. Clinical Anesthesia, 4th ed. Ch 49.
Lippincott. 2001. - Miller R. Millers Anesthesia, 6th ed. Ch 27.
Churchill. 2005. - Roizen M. Essence of Anesthesia Practice, 2nd ed.
2002 - Dunn P. Clinical Anesthesia Procedures of the
Massachusetts General Hospital, 7th ed. p324.
Lippincott. 2007.