What medicine can lactation urticaria take


Healing with hope, guiding with care.
Urticaria is a localized edematous reaction due to dilation of small blood vessels in the skin and mucosa and increased permeability. It normally subsides within 2-24 hours, but new rashes occur repeatedly, characterized by rapid regression, one after another, intense itching, and the course of disease can be delayed for several days to months. The etiology is complex, and most patients cannot find the cause, especially chronic urticaria. Common causes include food and food additives, inhalants, infections, drugs, physical factors, insect bites, mental and endocrine factors, genetic factors, etc. Patients with urticaria during lactation should actively seek and remove the cause. Infected patients should actively treat the infected focus. Food allergies should be identified to prevent re-consumption. If itching is obvious, antihistamines such as loratadine and chlorpheniramine can be used. If allergic symptoms are severe, oral corticosteroids can be used.