Anaphylactic shock induced by intraarticular injection of methylprednisolone acetate.

J Rheumatol

Division of Immunology, Wellesley Central Hospital, University of Toronto, Canada.

Published: June 1997

There are numerous reports of hypersensitivity reactions to corticosteroids. However, cases of anaphylactic shock after intraarticular injection of corticosteroids are exceedingly rare. We describe a case of anaphylaxis in a 31-year-old woman after intraarticular injection of synthetic methylprednisolone acetate. Immediately after injection she developed sneezing, angioedema, tachycardia, and marked hypotension. She responded promptly to treatment with subcutaneous epinephrine. She had received uneventfully one intraarticular injection of the same compound 4 years earlier. Intradermal skin testing showed strong reactivity to methylprednisolone acetate suspension, moderate reactivity to hydrocortisone, and weak reactivity to betamethasone. Tests with dexamethasone, triamcinolone, lidocaine, latex and nonsteroid constituents of the injected suspension including polyethylene glycol, polysorbate 80, mono and dibasic sodium phosphate, and myristyl-gamma-picolinium chloride were negative. This patient had developed anaphylaxis due to methylprednisolone acetate alone. Although such events are very rare, it is advisable to keep injectable epinephrine in the offices of rheumatologists.

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