Urticaria and erythema

Description

vibratory urticaria: This very rare form of angioedema develops in reply to contact with vibration. In vibratory angioedema, symptoms develop within two to five minutes after contact with vibration and dissolve after about an hour. Patients with this disorder do not suffer from dermographism or pressure urticaria. Vibratory angioedema is diagnosed by holding a vibrating device such as a laboratory vortex machine against the forearm for four minutes. Speedy swelling of the whole forearm extending into the upper arm is also noted later. The principal treatment is avoidance of vibratory stimulants. Antihistamines have also been proven helpful.[

Data source
FinnGen phenocode L12_URTICARIAERYTHEMA
Hospital Discharge registry ICD-10: L52/L51/L53/L54/L50
Cause of Death registry ICD-10: L52/L54/L51/L53/L50
Include L12_URTICARIA, L12_ERYTHEMAMULTIF, L12_ERYTHEMANODOSUM, L12_ERYTHEMATOUSOTH, L12_ERYTHRO_KELA, L12_ERYTHINOTH
Level in the ICD-hierarchy 2
First defined in version DF2
Ontology
DOID 1554
GWAS catalog 1000775
SNOMED CT 51247001

Key figures

Sex All Female Male
Number of individuals 3650 2500 1150
Unadjusted prevalence (%) 2.75 3.33 2.0
Mean age at first event (years) 42.51 42.53 42.47
Median number of events / individual 1 1 1

Clinical metrics

Sex All Female Male
Recurrence within 6 months (%) 23.89 26.44 18.35
Case fatality at 5-years (%) 1.73 1.48 2.26

Associations