acquired cold urticaria (ACU) is a subtype of physical urticaria that is caused by the release of proinflammatory mast cell mediators after cold exposure
ACU
characterized by the development of weal-and-flare type skin reactions and/or angiooedema caused by release of histamine, leukotrienes and other proinflammatory mast-cell mediators after exposure of the skin to cold (1)
symptoms typically occur minutes after the skin is exposed to cold air, liquids or objects - usually limited to cold-exposed skin areas
note though that extensive cold contact may result in generalized urticarial symptoms and/or in systemic reactions including headache, dyspnoea, hypotension and loss of consciousness - most frequently results from extensive cold contact during water exposure
patients with a history of oropharyngeal oedema seem to be at particularly high risk for developing shock-like reactions after aquatic activity
most frequently affects young adults - affects women more than men (2:1)
mean duration of the disease is 4-5 years (1)
remission or at least improvement of symptoms in 50% of patients within 5 years
incidence of ACU has been estimated to be 0.05%
higher incidences are found in regions with a cold climate
differential diagnosis
subdivided into primary and secondary ACU - are different designations in accordance with an unknown (primary) or suspected (secondary) underlying cause or disease for ACU
ACU can be the secondary manifestation of underlying hematologic or infectious diseases (eg, cryoglobulinemia or mononucleosis)
there are also some very rare atypical subtypes of cold urticaria
includes two hereditary familial cold syndromes: delayed cold urticaria and familial cold auto-inflammatory syndrome (FCAS)
aetiology
causes and mechanisms involved in the aetiology and pathogenesis largely unknown
reported associations with viral or bacterial infections including borreliosis, hepatitis, infectious mononucleosis, and human immunodeficiency virus infection
other associations include with Helicobacter pylori colonization, acute toxoplasmosis and other parasitic infections
infections of the upper respiratory tract, teeth or urogenital tract may also be associated with ACU
infrequent immunological findings in patients with ACU include cryoglobulinaemia, composed of monoclonal IgG and mixed types of IgG/IgM and IgG/IgA/cryoglobulins
prevalence of functional anti-IgE antibodies (IgG and IgM) has been described
an association with haematological, lymphatic or neoplastic diseases has been reported
diagnosis/investigation
requires specialist review
cold-provocation testing -a positive immediate cold-stimulation test (CST), i.e. the development of urticarial skin lesions at sites of cold challenge, verifies the presence of ACU
management
seek specialist advice
avoidance of cold - avoidance of cold exposure is desirable (but not always achievable)
symptomatic therapy
antihistamine treatment is the most common and the most effective symptomatic therapeutic option to prevent and reduce patients reactions after cold exposure - however, sufficient reduction of urticarial symptoms in many patients with ACU requires high dosing with antihistamines, up to four times the daily recommended dose
other treatment options for the therapy of severe ACU with high risk of life-threatening reactions and/or an insufficient response to antihistamines, include the concomitant use of leucotriene antagonists, ciclosporin, corticosteroids
there is study evidence that combination therapy with antihistamines and leukotriene receptor antagonists is more effective than each drug given alone (2)
curative therapy
antibiotic therapy should be considered in some patients (1)
occasionally, patients with ACU have been shown to benefit from such treatment even if no underlying infection can be detected
further treatment options
induction of cold tolerance (hardening) is an effective method of treating patients with ACU
treatment with topical capsaicin has been reported to prevent ACU symptoms
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