Management: IgE-Mediated Anaphylaxis, Antibody-Mediated Cytotoxicity,
Immune Complex Reactions, Delayed T-Cell Responses, Thermal and Cold
Injuries, Electrical Trauma, Chemical Exposures, Arthropod and Mammalian
Bites, Brown Recluse and Spider Envenomation, Cardiovascular Dysrhythmias,
Bradycardia, Tachycardia, Hypotension, Bioterrorism Pathogens, TBI
Assessment, Heatstroke, Frostbite, Wound Care, Epinephrine Protocols,
Antihistamine Therapy, Rhabdomyolysis, Neurovascular Assessment, Shock
Management, Oxygenation, Fluid Resuscitation, Electrolyte Imbalance,
Diagnostic Imaging, CBC and CMP Evaluation, ECG Interpretation, Poison Control
Guidelines, Preventive Education, Emergency Referral, Patient Monitoring,
Clinical Interventions Exam Questions Verified and Provided with Complete A+
Graded Rationales Latest Updated 2026
Type 1: IgE: mediated hypersensitivity response
inflammatory response activated
anaphylaxis
Type 2: antibody-mediated cellular response (cytotoxic)
Destruction (toxic) to any cell with allergen-antibody (Rh-incompatibility)
Type 3: antibody - allergen immune response
IgM and IgG activation
Delayed response 2-3 weeks post-exposure (medications)
Type 4: delayed hypersensitivity response
T cell dependent; begin in skin (where t cells typically are)
Skin reactions, TB skin test
,anaphylaxis
Systemic, life threatening allergic response
Usually immediate reaction, but can be delayed by up to 2-3 hours
Food and drug reactions are most common
anaphylaxis patho
IgE mediated response
Bronchospasm, hypoxia, hypotension
Reaction from basophils and mast cells that release histamine, causing increased capillary permeability
Uniphasic vs biphasic
Uniphasic anaphylaxis
most common
symptoms peak at 30 minutes and resolve within a hour
Biphasic
symptoms return 1-8 hours after they have resolved (also called protracted anaphylaxis)
anaphlaxis clinical presentation/physical exam
wekness
Nausea/vomiting
urticarial eruptions
wheezing, high-pitched...tight airways
, Confusion, restlessness, anxiety
Tachycardia, EKG with ST elevation, inverted T
anaphlaxis managment
pulse oximetry, airway
Vital signs/mental status
ECG
ER
Epinephrine: 1mg/ml 0.2-0.5mg IM, repeat every 5-15 minutes as needed to max dose of 1mg
Histamine antagonist (H1 and H2): second line treatment
anaphlaxis prevention/education
Skin testing and/or RAST
Skin testing can NOT be done until at least 6 weeks after event
Referral to allergist if possible
Medic alert bracelet
Epi-pen - teach how to use and to carry at all times
Bites/stings
Bites/stings are vectors for infection/hypersensitive reactions
Sting may result in IgE mediated reactions
Venoms contain: histamine, serotonin and kinins
may cause local or systemic or delayed reaction
Local reaction - area of erythema, edema, pruritis
Toxic reaction - fever, syncope, h/a, GI distress, seizure
Systemic reaction - see anaphylaxis