IMMUNOLOGY

Angiodema

1. Definition & Key Clinical Features

  • Anatomical depth Swelling of the reticular dermis, subcutaneous fat or sub-mucosa
    • lips
    • tongue
    • uvula
    • larynx
    • bowel wall
    • genitalia
  • Consistency
    • “Brawny” – tends to feel thick and firm
    • non-pitting
    • may be painful or warm.
  • Onset/Duration
    • Minutes–hours
    • histaminergic episodes usually resolve <24 h
    • bradykinin-mediated episodes 24–72 h
  • Red-flags
    • Voice change, stridor, dysphagia, abdominal colic → treat as airway emergency. Allergy Australia

2. Pathophysiological Classification

MechanismMediatorTypical contextResponse to adrenaline/antihistamine
Mast-cell / histamineHistamine, PGD₂• Allergy
• Anaphylaxis
• urticaria
• NSAID or opiate reactions
Yes (rapid)
Bradykinin excessBradykinin• ACE-inhibitor
• Hereditary (C1-INH deficiency/dysfunction)
• Acquired C1-INH deficiency
Poor (requires specific therapy)


3. Aetiology

Hereditary angio-oedema (HAE)

  • Definition & genetics
    Autosomal-dominant, bradykinin-mediated angioedema caused by deficiency or dysfunction of C1 esterase inhibitor (C1-INH). The unchecked kallikrein–kinin cascade generates excess bradykinin, resulting in recurrent, non-pruritic swelling of skin and mucosa. Australian Prescriber
  • Epidemiology
    • Prevalence ≈ 1 in 50 000 people worldwide.
    • About 50 % of gene carriers experience their first attack before 10 years of age. Allergy Australia
  • Clinical phenotypes
TypeC1-INH antigenC1-INH functional activityProportion of casesTypical mutation
Type I↓ (low)↓ (low)~85 %SERPING1 loss-of-function
Type II↔/↑ (normal or elevated)↓ (dysfunctional)~15 %SERPING1 missense (dysfunctional protein)
HAE with normal C1-INH*NormalNormal< 5 %Gain-of-function variants in F12, PLG, ANGPT1, KNG1, MYOF, HS3ST6, etc.

* Previously called “type III”; generally shows oestrogen sensitivity and later onset.

  • Pathophysiological hallmark
    Quantitative or qualitative C1-INH impairment → uncontrolled plasma kallikrein activity → over-production of bradykinin → increased vascular permeability → episodic angioedema.

Acquired bradykinin-mediated

TriggerMechanismIncidence / risk profileSalient clinical clues
ACE-inhibitors (eg ramipril, perindopril)↓ Bradykinin breakdown → excess bradykinin0.1 – 0.7 % of users; risk ↑ 4- to 5-fold in people of African ancestry, females, smokers, age > 65 y JA Clinical OnlineUpToDateMay occur anytime from first dose to years later; no urticaria; does not respond to antihistamines or adrenaline. Icatibant or C1-INH concentrate is required in severe cases.
ARBs (eg irbesartan)Unclear; minimal effect on bradykinin but occasional cross-reactivityIncidence ≈ one-third that of ACEIs; true cross-reaction is rare but possible NP Journaluspharmacist.comConsider in patients who switch from an ACEI and relapse.
Oestrogen exposure (combined OCP, HRT, pregnancy, tamoxifen)Up-regulates kallikrein–kinin cascade; may unmask HAE with normal C1-INH (FXII, PLG, etc.)Predominantly affects women; attacks often coincide with high-oestrogen states BioMed CentralBioMed CentralLaryngeal episodes more common; avoid exogenous oestrogen, consider lanadelumab / berotralstat for prophylaxis.
Acquired C1-INH deficiencylymphoproliferative or autoimmune anti-C1-INH antibodyAuto-antibody neutralises C1-INH or consumes itVery rare (< 1 : 500 000); median age > 40 y; 50–70 % have an underlying B-cell malignancy immunology.orgThe Australian National UniversityLow C1-INH and low C4 with no family history; treat flares with C1-INH or icatibant and address the underlying dyscrasia (eg rituximab).

HistaminergicHistamine (mast-cell)–mediated angioedema

Sub-categoryUnderlying pathwayTypical precipitantsKey management points
IgE-mediated allergy / anaphylaxisAntigen cross-links IgE on mast cells → histamine & tryptase releaseFoods (nuts, shellfish), β-lactams, latex, insect venom, contrast media (in true IgE-positive cases)IM adrenaline first-line; add high-dose second-generation H1 antihistamine and corticosteroid. Allergy Australia
Non-IgE mast-cell activationDirect receptor-dependent degranulationOpioids (morphine, codeine), radiocontrast, vancomycin (“red-man”), neuromuscular blockersMay occur on first exposure; treat as for anaphylaxis but adrenaline requirements often lower; pre-medicate with H1/H2 ± glucocorticoid if contrast unavoidable. Walsh Medical MediaAAAAI
Cyclo-oxygenase-1 inhibitionCOX-1 blockade → arachidonic acid shunted to leukotriene pathwayAspirin, non-selective NSAIDsCross-reactive; typically urticaria + angioedema within 30–120 min. Stop culprit; consider montelukast for prevention. JA Clinical OnlineSpringerLink
Idiopathic chronic / recurrent angioedemaUnknown; mast-cell or kinin pathways variably implicatedNo identifiable triggerTrial high-dose non-sedating H1 antihistamine → a

Practical differentiation at the bedside

FeatureBradykinin-drivenHistamine-driven
Speed of onsetSlower (hours)Rapid (minutes–hours)
Itch / urticariaAbsentCommon
Response to adrenaline / antihistaminePoorGood
C4 level (between attacks)Often lowNormal


4. Initial Assessment (ED / GP)

  1. Airway, Breathing, Circulation – anticipate rapid laryngeal progression; early anaesthetics/ENT call-out.
  2. Focused history
    • drug list (ACE-I?)
    • C1-INH deficiency FHx
    • urticaria presence
    • prior similar episodes
    • trigger exposure.
  3. Targeted tests (after stabilisation)
    • C4 + quantitative/functional C1-INH if bradykinin AE suspected.
    • Consider naso-laryngoscopy for voice change/dysphagia. AAEM

5. Acute Treatment Algorithm

StepHistamine-mediatedBradykinin-mediated (HAE or ACEI)
A. First-lineAdrenaline 0.5 mg IM (0.01 mg/kg child) ± repeat q5 min until improvedNot effective – skip
B. AdjunctsNon-sedating H1 antihistamine (e.g. cetirizine 10 mg PO/IV)

± H2 blocker

± corticosteroid (e.g. hydrocortisone 200 mg IV)
Specific therapies:

Icatibant 30 mg SC × 1 (may repeat at 6 h)
(PBS Authority for acute HAE; off-label ACEI-AE)​
PBS Australian Prescriber


C1-INH concentrate (Berinert® 20 IU/kg IV) or recombinant (Conestat alfa 50 IU/kg IV, max 4200 IU) (HAE only) ​Allergy Australia

Fresh frozen plasma 2 units IV if above unavailable (HAE or ACEI) 
FFP contains ACE (kininase II), which degrades bradykinin
⚠️ risk viral transmission/volume overload AAEM
C. Airway controlEarly intubation/otracheal tube if tongue or laryngeal swelling progressesSame; oedema may be refractory—consider surgical airway early
D. Observe≥4 h post-resolution≥24 h; biphasic rarity but delayed oedema possible

Note: Epinephrine, antihistamines and steroids have no proven benefit in isolated ACE-I angio-oedema, but give empirically if mechanism unclear while arranging definitive therapy. AAEM AAEM

6. Disposition & Secondary Prevention

ContextKey actions
ACE-I angio-oedema• Cease ACE-I permanently (class effect).
• Substitute dihydropyridine CCB, thiazide or β-blocker; ARB only with specialist advice.
• Provide written “ACEI-angio-oedema” alert.
HAE• Supply patient-held ASCIA HAE Management Plan + self-injectable icatibant or C1-INH.

• Consider long-term prophylaxis when ≥2 attacks/month or QoL impaired:
 – Lanadelumab 300 mg SC q2–4 weeks (PBS 2024).
 – Berotralstat 150 mg PO daily.
 – Attenuated androgens (danazol) or tranexamic acid if modern biologics unavailable. Allergy Australia
Histaminergic• Identify triggers

provide ASCIA Action Plan for Anaphylaxis
Training in adrenaline autoinjector if systemic allergy suspected. Allergy Australia

Follow-up with clinical immunologist is recommended for all recurrent or idiopathic angio-oedema. Allergy Australia

7. Practical Doses

DrugDoseNotes
Adrenaline IM0.5 mg (0.3 mg ≥ 6 y; 0.15 mg < 6 y) lateral thighRepeat q5 min PRN; give lying flat
Icatibant30 mg SC (abdomen)May repeat ×2 at ≥6 h; PBS Authority (HAE acute attacks)
C1-INH (Berinert®)20 IU/kg IV push over 5 minWeight-based; e.g. 1500 IU for 75 kg patient
Hydrocortisone200 mg IV (child 4 mg/kg max 100 mg)Slow onset (4–6 h)
Cetirizine IV/PO10 mgFirst-line antihistamine

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