CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne
-
Beta-blocker therapy is associated with an increase in the severity and, possibly, the incidence of acute anaphylaxis. The population at risk consists of people with allergic conditions who are given a beta-blocker for an unrelated condition. Anaphylaxis under these conditions may be severe, protracted and resistant to conventional treatment because of the beta-adrenergic blockade. ⋯ Clinical allergists, internists and family practitioners in particular should be aware of the need for aggressive and prolonged support in patients who experience anaphylaxis while receiving beta-blocker therapy and should report all such occurrences to the federal registry of adverse drug reactions. Allergy skin testing or immunotherapy is inadvisable in patients who take a beta-blocker orally or in the form of ophthalmic eyedrops. The list of relative contraindications to beta-blocker use should be extended to include susceptibility to recurrent anaphylaxis, whether it is idiopathic or due to an identifiable cause.