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Apex Nursing

Chart — Emergency Nursing

Anaphylaxis Management Chart

Recognition criteria, severity grading, treatment sequence, epinephrine dosing by route and age, secondary medications, biphasic reaction monitoring, and discharge criteria at a glance.

Educational use only. Anaphylaxis is a medical emergency managed under provider direction and your facility’s emergency protocols; medication doses and routes come from provider orders, not this chart. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Epinephrine is ALWAYS first-line. No contraindications in anaphylaxis. Delay in epinephrine = increased mortality.

Antihistamines and steroids are adjuncts — they do NOT reverse anaphylaxis and are secondary to epinephrine.

Recognition — Signs by System

SystemMild SignsSevere Signs (anaphylaxis)
Skin / Mucosa (90% of cases)Urticaria (hives), erythema, flushing, itching, mild angioedema (lip/tongue swelling)Diffuse urticaria, severe angioedema involving tongue/uvula
RespiratoryNasal congestion, rhinorrhea, sneezingHoarseness, stridor, wheeze, dyspnea, bronchospasm → respiratory failure
CardiovascularMild tachycardia, pallorSevere hypotension, tachycardia, syncope, cardiovascular collapse, cardiac arrest
GINausea, cramping, vomitingSevere vomiting, diarrhea, profound abdominal pain
NeurologicalAnxiety, restlessness, 'sense of doom'Altered mental status, loss of consciousness

Important: Skin symptoms are ABSENT in up to 20% of anaphylaxis cases. Do NOT rule out anaphylaxis because skin is clear — cardiovascular collapse alone can be anaphylaxis.

Diagnostic Criteria

Anaphylaxis is likely if ANY one of these 3 clinical criteria is met:

Criteria 1 (most common):

Acute onset of SKIN or MUCOSA involvement + EITHER respiratory compromise OR cardiovascular collapse

Criteria 2:

Exposure to likely allergen + TWO OR MORE of: skin/mucosal, respiratory, cardiovascular, or persistent GI symptoms

Criteria 3:

Exposure to KNOWN allergen + reduced BP alone (systolic drop >30% from baseline, or age-based cutoff)

Treatment Sequence

Step 1: EPINEPHRINE — IMMEDIATELY

  • Epinephrine 0.3 mg (adult) or 0.15 mg (child 15–30 kg) IM into lateral thigh (vastus lateralis)
  • Concentration: 1:1,000 (1 mg/mL)
  • Repeat every 5–15 minutes if inadequate response
  • No contraindications to epinephrine in anaphylaxis
  • EpiPen delivers 0.3 mg auto-injector IM

NCLEX: ALWAYS first. IM lateral thigh — faster absorption than deltoid. 1:1,000 for IM (NOT 1:10,000 which is IV cardiac arrest dose).

Step 2: POSITION — Simultaneous

  • Supine with legs elevated (Trendelenburg) — maximizes venous return
  • Exception: respiratory distress → semi-recumbent (sit up slightly)
  • Pregnant: left lateral tilt (relieve aortocaval compression)
  • DO NOT allow patient to sit up or stand — 'empty ventricle syndrome' risk

NCLEX: Supine + legs elevated for most patients. Sitting up during anaphylaxis → fatal cardiovascular collapse risk.

Step 3: OXYGEN + AIRWAY

  • 100% O₂ via non-rebreather mask at 10–15 L/min
  • Monitor SpO₂ continuously
  • Prepare for intubation — call anesthesia early if stridor or voice changes
  • Angioedema can make intubation impossible if left too long
  • Have surgical airway (cricothyrotomy) kit available for severe angioedema

NCLEX: Call for airway backup early — angioedema progresses rapidly. Intubation becomes impossible with severe swelling.

Step 4: IV ACCESS + FLUIDS

  • Two large-bore IV lines (18G or larger)
  • NS bolus: 1–2 liters IV rapidly for hypotension
  • Repeat boluses as needed — anaphylaxis causes massive fluid shifts (may need 4–6 L)
  • Vasopressors (norepinephrine) if hypotension unresponsive to fluids + epinephrine

NCLEX: IV fluids are the second most important intervention after epinephrine for cardiovascular collapse.

Step 5: SECONDARY MEDICATIONS

  • H1 antihistamine: Diphenhydramine (Benadryl) 25–50 mg IV or IM — relieves hives/itching only
  • H2 antihistamine: Famotidine 20 mg IV (ranitidine is no longer available — withdrawn from the US market in 2020) — adjunct benefit
  • Corticosteroid: Methylprednisolone 125 mg IV or Hydrocortisone 200 mg IV — may prevent biphasic reaction (onset 4–8h, not acute treatment)
  • Bronchodilator: Albuterol nebulized for persistent bronchospasm

NCLEX: Antihistamines and steroids do NOT stop anaphylaxis — epinephrine does. These are adjuncts only.

Step 6: GLUCAGON — if beta-blocker patient

  • Glucagon 1–5 mg IV over 5 minutes, then infusion 5–15 mcg/min
  • Use when: patient on beta-blockers + refractory hypotension not responding to epinephrine
  • Beta-blockers block epinephrine alpha/beta effects → glucagon acts via non-adrenergic pathway

NCLEX: Beta-blocker patient + anaphylaxis = add glucagon. Key pharmacology NCLEX question.

Epinephrine Dosing by Route

RouteConcentrationAdult DosePediatric DoseSiteIndication
IM (preferred)1:1,000 (1 mg/mL)0.3–0.5 mg (0.3–0.5 mL)0.01 mg/kg max 0.5 mgLateral thigh (vastus lateralis)Standard anaphylaxis treatment — first-line
Auto-injector (EpiPen)1:1,000 (pre-loaded)EpiPen: 0.3 mgEpiPen Jr: 0.15 mg (15–30 kg)Outer thigh (through clothing OK)Community use; prior to hospital arrival
IV (reserved for arrest/refractory)1:10,000 (0.1 mg/mL)0.1–0.5 mg slow IV push OR infusion 1–4 mcg/min0.01 mg/kg IVIV line — requires cardiac monitoringCardiac arrest, refractory anaphylaxis with IV access, profound cardiovascular collapse
Nebulized (racemic epi)2.25% racemic epi0.5 mL in 3 mL NS via nebulizerSameInhaledAdjunct for upper airway edema / stridor (NOT primary anaphylaxis treatment)

Concentration warning: IM anaphylaxis = 1:1,000 (1 mg/mL). IV cardiac arrest = 1:10,000 (0.1 mg/mL). These are 10× different — a critical safety distinction for NCLEX and clinical practice.

Biphasic Anaphylaxis — Monitoring

DefinitionSecond anaphylaxis reaction occurring without further allergen exposure after apparent resolution of initial reaction
Timing8–72 hours after initial reaction (most within 8–12 hours)
Incidence~5–20% of anaphylaxis cases; higher risk with delayed epinephrine, severe initial reaction, unknown trigger
SeverityCan be as severe as or MORE severe than initial reaction
Observation periodMinimum 4–8 hours after apparent resolution. 24 hours for severe reactions or high-risk patients.
Discharge criteriaSymptoms resolved; stable for observation period; prescribe 2 EpiPens; anaphylaxis action plan; allergist referral; medical alert ID

NCLEX Summary

Epinephrine FIRST — always, immediately, no exceptions in anaphylaxis.

IM lateral thigh (vastus lateralis) — faster than deltoid. IV reserved for cardiac arrest/refractory cases.

1:1,000 IM vs 1:10,000 IV — concentrations are 10× different.

Supine + legs elevated (not sitting up). Fatal "empty ventricle syndrome" if patient stands up during anaphylaxis.

Antihistamines do NOT reverse anaphylaxis — they only treat urticaria and itching.

Steroids have 4–8h onset — no acute benefit. May prevent biphasic reaction.

Beta-blocker + anaphylaxis → add glucagon.

Observe 4–8h minimum for biphasic reaction. Discharge with 2 EpiPens.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with Emergency Nurses Association (ENA) · AHA ACLS / PALS Guidelines · Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →