Chapter 144 Serum Sickness
Clinical Manifestations
The symptoms of serum sickness generally begin 7-12 days after injection of the foreign material but may appear as late as 3 wk afterward. The onset of symptoms may be accelerated if there has been earlier exposure or previous allergic reaction to the same antigen. A few days before the onset of generalized symptoms, the site of injection may become edematous and erythematous. Symptoms usually include fever, malaise, and rashes (Chapter 637.1). Urticaria and morbilliform rashes are the predominant types of skin eruptions, and pruritus is common. In a prospective study of serum sickness induced by administration of equine antithymocyte globulin, an initial rash was noted in most patients. It began as a thin serpiginous band of erythema along the sides of the hands, fingers, feet, and toes at the junction of the palmar or plantar skin with the skin of the dorsolateral surface. In most patients, the band of erythema was replaced by petechiae or purpura, presumably because of low platelet counts or local damage to small blood vessels. Additional symptoms include edema, myalgia, lymphadenopathy, arthralgia or arthritis involving multiple joints, and gastrointestinal complaints, including pain, nausea, diarrhea, and melena. The disease generally runs a self-limited course, with recovery in 1-2 wk. Carditis, glomerulonephritis, Guillain-Barré syndrome, and peripheral neuritis are rare complications. Serum sickness–like reactions from drugs are characterized by fever, pruritus, urticaria, and arthralgias that usually begin 1-3 wk after drug exposure. The urticarial skin eruption becomes increasingly erythematous as the reaction progresses and can evolve into dusky centers with round plaques.
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