Allergy and Clinical Immunology Department, 424 General Military Training Hospital, Thessaloniki, Greece.
Pediatr Allergy Immunol. 2011 Feb;22(1 Pt 1):36-42. doi: 10.1111/j.1399-3038.2010.01093.x.
Acute urticaria (AU) is a common condition that often presents in childhood. Although there is a general perception of cyclic annual trends in AU, no one has tried to identify any seasonal variation on its prevalence and incidence, associate environmental influences and impute geographic, ethnic, or even genetic features that may contribute to its onset. We aimed to analyze the influence of climate and geographic parameters on annual fluctuation of AU cases referred to the Emergency Departments (EDs) of Norwich (UK) and Heraklion (Crete, Greece), compare all identifiable potential triggers and severity, and calculate the prevalence and incidence of AU. Record-based data of all children up to 14 yr of age referred to both EDs between June 2005 and May 2007 were examined retrospectively. Demographic characteristics and any potential identifiable triggers of AU were recorded and compared. Poisson's regression was utilized to examine any influence of meteorological parameters on AU incidence. Edwards' test for seasonality was applied to identify any significant seasonal trend of the AU incidence within each city. Seven hundred and twenty-nine AU cases were identified (324 in Norwich and 405 in Heraklion), among 56,624 total referrals (28,931 and 27,693 cases, respectively). Respiratory infections were found to be the most commonly associated potential triggers of AU and food allergens the least. AU cases and incidence rates in both cities were equally distributed during the study period. A non-significant seasonal trend in AU incidence (October, April-May) was observed in Norwich, in contrast to a significant seasonal pattern (December, February-May) of AU in Heraklion. Temperature was inversely associated with AU incidence, while the statistically significant effect of relative humidity varied. Acute childhood urticaria shows a similar epidemiological pattern in northern and southern Europe regardless of the expected differences in genetic, geographic, and environmental background. Temperature and humidity are correlated with AU incidence. Seasonality of several acute respiratory viral infections, the most prominent associated trigger of AU, coincides with the observed AU seasonality, suggesting a potential linkage. However, this needs to be elucidated from larger epidemiological studies.
急性荨麻疹(AU)是一种常见的疾病,通常在儿童时期出现。尽管人们普遍认为 AU 存在周期性的年度趋势,但没有人试图确定其患病率和发病率的任何季节性变化,也没有将环境影响与可能导致发病的地理、种族甚至遗传特征联系起来。我们旨在分析气候和地理参数对诺里奇(英国)和伊拉克利翁(克里特岛,希腊)急诊部(ED)就诊的 AU 病例年度波动的影响,比较所有可识别的潜在诱因和严重程度,并计算 AU 的患病率和发病率。回顾性分析了 2005 年 6 月至 2007 年 5 月期间在这两个 ED 就诊的所有 14 岁以下儿童的记录数据。记录了人口统计学特征和任何可能的 AU 潜在诱因,并进行了比较。利用泊松回归检验气象参数对 AU 发病率的影响。应用爱德华季节性检验识别每个城市 AU 发病率的任何显著季节性趋势。共确定了 729 例 AU 病例(诺里奇 324 例,伊拉克利翁 405 例),56624 例总转诊病例中(分别为 28931 例和 27693 例)。呼吸道感染被认为是最常见的 AU 相关潜在诱因,而食物过敏原则是最少的。在研究期间,两个城市的 AU 病例和发病率都分布均匀。诺里奇的 AU 发病率呈非显著季节性趋势(10 月、4 月至 5 月),而伊拉克利翁的 AU 发病率呈显著季节性模式(12 月、2 月至 5 月)。温度与 AU 发病率呈负相关,而相对湿度的统计学显著影响则不同。急性儿童荨麻疹在北欧和南欧表现出相似的流行病学模式,尽管遗传、地理和环境背景存在预期差异。温度和湿度与 AU 发病率相关。几种急性呼吸道病毒感染的季节性,即 AU 最主要的相关诱因,与观察到的 AU 季节性一致,这表明可能存在联系。然而,这需要从更大的流行病学研究中阐明。