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Guide — Emergency Nursing

Anaphylaxis Management Guide

Recognition criteria, epinephrine-first protocol, dosing and route, airway management priorities, secondary medications, biphasic reaction, and nursing priorities for emergency anaphylaxis care.

9 min read · Emergency Nursing

Educational use only. Anaphylaxis is a life-threatening emergency. Follow institutional emergency protocols and provider orders. Always call for help immediately. 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.

What Is Anaphylaxis?

Definition: A severe, life-threatening, systemic hypersensitivity reaction involving multiple organ systems, typically IgE-mediated. Mast cell and basophil degranulation releases histamine, tryptase, and other mediators → vasodilation, increased vascular permeability, bronchospasm, and mucus production.

Onset: Usually within minutes of exposure (faster onset = more severe reaction). Food allergies may have 30-minute delay. Exercise-induced anaphylaxis develops over longer period.

Systems affected: Skin/mucosa (urticaria, angioedema, flushing) + respiratory (wheeze, stridor, dyspnea) + cardiovascular (hypotension, tachycardia, syncope) + GI (nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps) + neurological (altered mental status, sense of doom)

Common Triggers

CategoryCommon Examples
FoodsPeanuts, tree nuts, shellfish, fish, milk, eggs, wheat, soy
MedicationsPenicillin/beta-lactams, NSAIDs, aspirin, sulfonamides, contrast dye, ACE inhibitors (angioedema)
Insect venomBee, wasp, hornet, fire ant stings
LatexLatex gloves, catheters, condoms — especially high risk in healthcare workers and patients with spina bifida
Exercise-inducedExercise alone or in combination with specific foods (exercise-induced anaphylaxis)
IdiopathicNo identifiable trigger found in ~20% of cases

Recognition Criteria

Anaphylaxis is likely if ANY of these 3 scenarios is met:

Scenario 1 (most common)

Acute onset of skin/mucosal involvement PLUS respiratory compromise or cardiovascular collapse

Example: Hives + wheezing; angioedema + hypotension

Scenario 2

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

Example: Known bee allergy + hypotension + nausea after sting

Scenario 3

Exposure to KNOWN allergen + reduced BP alone

Example: Known peanut allergy + systolic BP drop of >30% from baseline

Clinical note: Skin symptoms (urticaria, flushing) may be ABSENT in up to 20% of anaphylaxis cases — do not rule out anaphylaxis because skin is clear. Cardiovascular collapse without skin findings can still be anaphylaxis.

Treatment Protocol — Step by Step

1 — EPINEPHRINE (FIRST AND ALWAYS)

Timing: Immediately

Action: Epinephrine 0.3–0.5 mg (0.3–0.5 mL of 1:1000) IM into the lateral thigh (vastus lateralis). Repeat every 5–15 minutes if no improvement.

Rationale: Reverses vasodilation, bronchoconstriction, and capillary leak simultaneously. Only drug that addresses all components of anaphylaxis.

Key point: No contraindications to epinephrine in anaphylaxis — do NOT withhold. IV only for cardiac arrest or profound refractory anaphylaxis.

2 — Position

Timing: Simultaneous with epinephrine

Action: Supine with legs elevated (Trendelenburg or legs up). Do NOT sit up or stand — increases risk of cardiovascular collapse.

Rationale: Maximizes venous return; prevents sudden cardiovascular collapse from position change ('empty ventricle syndrome').

Key point: If respiratory distress → allow patient to sit up. Pregnant → left lateral tilt to relieve aortocaval compression.

3 — Oxygen & Airway

Timing: Simultaneously

Action: High-flow O₂ via non-rebreather mask (10–15 L/min). Prepare for intubation: angioedema can progress rapidly. Continuous SpO₂ monitoring.

Rationale: Compensates for V/Q mismatch from bronchoconstriction and airway edema.

Key point: Call anesthesia early if stridor or voice changes — intubation becomes impossible once severe angioedema develops.

4 — IV Access & Fluids

Timing: Immediately

Action: Two large-bore IV lines. IV NS bolus 1–2 liters rapidly for hypotension. Continue boluses as needed (may require 4–6 L).

Rationale: Anaphylaxis causes massive fluid shifts out of vasculature — require aggressive volume replacement.

Key point: Fluid bolus is the second most important intervention after epinephrine for cardiovascular collapse.

5 — H1 Antihistamine

Timing: After epinephrine (secondary)

Action: Diphenhydramine (Benadryl) 25–50 mg IV or IM.

Rationale: Relieves urticaria and pruritus. Does NOT stop the reaction — only epinephrine does.

Key point: Do NOT give antihistamine INSTEAD of epinephrine — antihistamines do not reverse bronchoconstriction or cardiovascular collapse and act too slowly.

6 — H2 Antihistamine

Timing: After epinephrine (secondary)

Action: Ranitidine 50 mg IV or famotidine 20 mg IV.

Rationale: Additive benefit to H1 blockade for skin symptoms; may help with cardiovascular effects.

Key point: Secondary agent only; never substitute for epinephrine.

7 — Corticosteroids

Timing: After epinephrine (secondary)

Action: Methylprednisolone 125 mg IV or hydrocortisone 200 mg IV.

Rationale: May prevent biphasic reaction (evidence mixed). Reduces late-phase inflammation.

Key point: Slow onset (4–8 hours for full effect) — does NOT help the acute reaction. Secondary agent only.

8 — Bronchodilator

Timing: If bronchospasm persists after epinephrine

Action: Albuterol (salbutamol) nebulized — adjunct for bronchospasm. Does NOT replace epinephrine.

Rationale: Targets bronchospasm specifically; less cardiac effect than epinephrine.

Key point: Albuterol does not reverse anaphylaxis — epinephrine is still required.

9 — Glucagon

Timing: If patient on beta-blockers and refractory hypotension

Action: Glucagon 1–5 mg IV over 5 minutes, then infusion.

Rationale: Beta-blockers block epinephrine effects — glucagon acts via non-adrenergic pathway to increase heart rate and contractility.

Key point: Key NCLEX point: beta-blocker patients may not respond to epinephrine alone — add glucagon.

Biphasic Anaphylaxis

Definition: A second reaction occurring after apparent resolution of initial anaphylaxis, WITHOUT further allergen exposure. Can be as severe as or more severe than the initial reaction.

Timing8–72 hours after initial reaction (most within 8–12 hours)
Incidence~5–20% of anaphylaxis cases; higher risk with delayed epinephrine administration, severe initial reaction, or unknown trigger
Observation period4–8 hours (minimum) after apparent resolution; 24 hours for severe reactions or high-risk patients
Discharge teachingReturn immediately if symptoms recur. Prescribe epinephrine auto-injector (EpiPen) × 2. Allergist referral. Medical alert bracelet.

NCLEX Pearls

Epinephrine FIRST — always, no exceptions. Antihistamines and steroids are secondary. Delay in epinephrine = increased mortality.

Route: IM lateral thigh (vastus lateralis) — faster absorption than deltoid. IV route is reserved for cardiac arrest or refractory anaphylaxis with IV access.

Concentration matters: IM anaphylaxis dose = 1:1000 (0.3–0.5 mL). IV cardiac arrest dose = 1:10,000. These are 10× different — never confuse them.

Supine with legs elevated (not sitting up). Exception: respiratory distress → elevate head.

Beta-blocker patients: May not respond to epinephrine — give glucagon.

Antihistamines do NOT stop anaphylaxis. They relieve itching and hives but do not reverse bronchoconstriction or cardiovascular collapse.

Biphasic reaction: Observe for 4–8 hours minimum after resolution. Discharge with 2 EpiPens and return precautions.

"Sense of doom" (feeling of impending death) is a classic early symptom — take it seriously.

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 →