Serum sickness: Difference between revisions

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==Diagnosis==
==Diagnosis==
*Clinical diagnosis in which labs may be suggestive but not required<ref>Alissa HM et al. Serum Sickness Workup. Dec 14, 2015. http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/332032-workup#showall</ref>
*Mild leukopenia or leukocytosis
*ESR elevation
*Mild proteinuria
*Mild hematuria
*Mild serum Cr elevation
*Decreased C3, C4


==Treatment==
==Treatment==

Revision as of 17:29, 12 January 2016

Background

  • A type III hypersensitivity reaction
    • Secondary to injection of anitoxins (e.g. tetanus, rabies)
  • Reactions secondary to the administration of nonprotein drugs
    • Amoxicillin, cefaclor, cephalexin (Keflex), trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole

Clinical Features

  • Primary occurs 6-21 days after exposure
    • 1-4 days after subsequent exposures to the same antigen
  • Fever
  • Arthralgia
  • Lymphadenopathy
  • Skin eruption (rash)
    • Urticaria
    • Scarlatiniform rash
    • Maculopapular or purpuric lesions
    • Erythema multiforme

Differential Diagnosis

Polyarthritis

Algorithm for Polyarticular arthralgia

Diagnosis

  • Clinical diagnosis in which labs may be suggestive but not required[1]
  • Mild leukopenia or leukocytosis
  • ESR elevation
  • Mild proteinuria
  • Mild hematuria
  • Mild serum Cr elevation
  • Decreased C3, C4

Treatment

Disposition

Admit for:

  • Significant comorbidities (advanced or very young age, immunocompromised)
  • Severe symptoms
  • Hemodynamic instability/hypotension
  • Unclear diagnosis

Prognosis

  • Symptoms usually last 1-2 weeks before spontaneously subsiding
  • Long-lasting sequelae generally do not occur
  • Fatalities are rare and usually are due to continued administration of the antigen
  1. Alissa HM et al. Serum Sickness Workup. Dec 14, 2015. http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/332032-workup#showall