Ann Dermatol.  1999 Oct;11(4):260-262. 10.5021/ad.1999.11.4.260.

A Case of Contact Urticaria from a Latex Glove Occurred to an Operationg Room Nurse

Abstract

The prevalence of latex allergies has been on the increase along with the greater use of rubber products in daily life, medical, dental and occupational settings. Allergic reactions to latex can take two clinical forms of either contact dermatitis or immediate hypersensitivity reactions, which are provoked by the natural latex proteins or chemical additives used in the manufacturing process, respectively. A 25-year-old female, an operating room nurse, complained of recurrent pruritic erythematous wheals on both hands after the wearing of latex rubber gloves. The prick test and the usage Mlit't to the latex gloves were positive, and the RAST was class 3. To the best of our knowledge, is the first case report of contact urticaria from latex rubber gloves in Korean dermatologic literature.

Keyword

Latex allergy; Type 1 hypersensitivity; Operationg room nurse

MeSH Terms

Adult
Dermatitis, Contact
Female
Hand
Humans
Hypersensitivity
Hypersensitivity, Immediate
Latex Hypersensitivity
Latex*
Operating Rooms
Prevalence
Rubber
Urticaria*
Latex
Rubber
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