• Clin Med (Lond) · Feb 2015

    Case Reports

    Lesson of the month 2: The limitations of steroid therapy in bradykinin-mediated angioedema attacks.

    • Sharif Ismail, Leo Cheng, Sofia Grigoriadou, James Laffan, and Manoj Menon.
    • Royal London Hospital, London, UK sharif.ismail09@gmail.com.
    • Clin Med (Lond). 2015 Feb 1; 15 (1): 101103101-3.

    AbstractAcute angioedema attacks are conventionally treated with antihistamines and steroids, in line with a presumed mechanism of disease involving overwhelming mast-cell degranulation. This approach overlooks a small but important minority of cases in which attacks are bradykinin driven and exhibit poor responsiveness to steroid or anti-histamine therapy. These patients may have a family history of angioedema (hereditary angioedema), or a past medical history including B-cell lymphoproliferative disorders or autoimmune disease (acquired angioedema). Rather than steroid therapy, they respond to administration of a bradykinin inhibitor, or more commonly, a C1 esterase inhibitor substitute, to control acute symptoms and reduce the probability of invasive airway insertion. In the long-term, they require C1 esterase inhibitor sparing therapy and a treat-the-cause approach to reduce the risk of recurrent attacks. We present here a case of a middle-aged woman who presented with recurrent angioedema of initially uncertain aetiology.© 2015 Royal College of Physicians.

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