Understanding Hives (Urticaria)
Hives are red, itchy, and swollen areas on the skin. They are most often an allergic reaction from a food, medicine, or insect sting or bite. Read on to learn more about them.
Hives (urticaria) are red, itchy, and swollen areas (welts) on the skin. Sometimes hives are caused by an allergic reaction from eating a food or taking a medicine. Other times, hives can be caused by illnesses like the common cold. But sometimes the cause may not be known. A single hive can vary in size from a half inch to several inches. Hives can appear all over the body. Or they may appear on only one part of the body.
What causes hives?
Hives can be caused by allergies to food and drinks such as:
Tree nuts (almonds, walnuts, hazelnuts)
Peanuts
Eggs
Shellfish
Milk
Wheat
Soy
Colorings, preservatives, and spices used in foods
Hives can also be caused by medicines such as:
Antibiotics, especially penicillin and sulfa-based medicines
Anticonvulsant or antiseizure medicines
Chemotherapy medicines
Other causes of hives include:
Infection or virus
Heat
Cold air or cold water
Exercise
Scratching or rubbing your skin, or wearing tight-fitting clothes that rub your skin
Being exposed to sunlight or light from a light bulb, in rare cases
Inhaled chemicals in the environment from foods and medicines, insects, plants, or other sources
Latex allergy. If you already have a latex allergy, foods such as bananas, chestnuts, kiwis, or mangos can trigger hives.
In some cases, hives may occur again and again with no specific cause (idiopathic urticaria).
If you have hives
Stay away from the food, drink, medicine, or other thing that may be causing the hives.
Ask your healthcare provider how to control itchy or irritated skin.
Talk with your provider right away if you think a medicine or food gave you hives.
Watch for anaphylaxis
If you have hives, watch for symptoms of a severe reaction that can affect your entire body. This is called anaphylaxis. Symptoms can include swollen areas of the body, wheezing, trouble breathing or swallowing, and a hoarse voice. This reaction may happen right away, or it may happen in an hour or more. In extreme cases, the airways from mouth to lungs may swell and make breathing difficult. This is a medical emergency. Use epinephrine if you have it, and call
When to call your healthcare provider
Call your healthcare provider right away if:
Your hives feel uncomfortable
You have never had hives before
Your symptoms don't go away or come back
Your symptoms get worse or you have new symptoms, such as:
Sneezing, coughing, runny or stuffy nose
Itching of the eyes, nose, or roof of the mouth
Itching, burning, stinging, or pain
Dry, flaky, cracking, or scaly skin
Red or purple spots
Call 911
Call 911 right away if you have:
Swelling in your lips, tongue, or throat
Drooling
Trouble breathing, talking, or swallowing
Cool, moist, or pale (blue in color) skin
Fast and weak heartbeat
Wheezing or shortness of breath
Feeling lightheaded or confused
Diarrhea
Belly (abdominal) pain, cramps, or bloating
Severe nausea or vomiting
Seizure
Feeling dizzy or weak, or a sudden drop in blood pressure
Chest tightness