If you tuned into the latest Bollywood-related show on a streaming service over the weekend, you must have come across various health-related issues the ladies face, from air sickness to skin aging and a certain condition known as Urticaria. Dr. Smriti Naswa Singh, Consultant Dermatologist, Fortis Hospital, Mulund explains the definition of the condition, its causes, and treatment.
Urticaria, commonly recognized as 'hives' is an outbreak of red and prickly bumps that suddenly appear on the skin. The reasons could be due to certain allergies, or at times for unknown reasons. The bumps or rash may vary in size and cause severe itching; it may also cause burning on the skin, causing discomfort as well as disturbing one's daily routine. The bumps/ wheals may suddenly appear anyplace on the body - the face, hands or legs even the lips, tongue, ears, or throat. The swelling of lips, eyelids, genitals can be painful, and swelling of throat/windpipe can cause breathlessness which is an emergency and the patient has to be rushed to the hospital. Depending on the severity of the condition, it may last for a few hours, or fade away after the reaction runs its course. Usually, an Urticaria reaction lasts for less than 24hours and fades off only to recur in the same or other areas. If Urticaria lasts beyond 72hours, one has to find the causes beyond the skin (involving inflammation of blood vessels), called Urticarial Vasculitis.
Types Of Urticaria And What Are Its Causes?
Urticaria is a type of skin allergy. Allergy means body's hyper response to normal, common, harmless stimuli like dust, dirt, cat fur, pollen, change of weather etc. Urticaria ensues when the body reacts to the release of histamine which is found in the body's cells or other chemicals into the bloodstream. Inflammation is caused due to histamine, and fluid accumulates under the skin eventually causing 'hives or welts'. It is said that "anything under the sun, including the sun can cause Urticaria". Sometimes its very easy to find the cause, when Urticaria erupts immediately after exposure to allergen, but sometimes it takes long history taking in OPD, or systematic diary entries for days & weeks to pin point the cause. However, the common triggers to this reaction are:
Reaction to medication such as antibiotics or Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDs), or vaccines
- Insect stings
- Change in temperature or extreme temperatures
- Food - shellfish, nuts, Wheat products, food additives, cow milk protein etc.
- Secondary infections
- Exposure to sunlight
- Pollen/ dust mites
- Stress
- Animal-related allergies
- Chronic illness - Thyroid