Antianaphylaxis

Antianaphylactic shock and atopic bronchial asthma. Quincke syndrome is an acute allergic reaction manifested by local or generalized swelling of the skin, mucous membranes and subcutaneous tissue with the release of biologically active substances, leading to manifestations of allergic shock and bronchospasm. The clinical picture of Quincke's syndrome includes urticaria (in 90% of cases), acute urticaria (pseudoangioma), Lyell's syndrome, Quincke's edema, limited or diffuse facial edema, as well as Lofgren's syndrome, which is a mixed form of the disease in which skin lesions are observed face and limbs, cardiovascular and respiratory failure, angioedema. Almost all doctors (general practitioner, pediatrician, therapist, rheumatologist) encounter these manifestations