Serum sickness in Adult
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Synopsis

Serum sickness typically occurs 7-21 days after exposure to exogenous proteins or chemicals. Antigens induce antibody production, resulting in circulating antigen-antibody complexes that lead to complement activation and release vasoactive amines and cytokines, which give rise to the clinical features mentioned above.
Risk factors for the development of serum sickness include a higher dose of the medication, certain preparations, repeated exposure, older age, cryoglobulinemia or hypergammaglobulinemia, and an intermittent dosing schedule. Children are less likely to get serum sickness reaction than adults.
The disease is usually self-limited and lasts less than one week. Renal, hepatic, pulmonary, gastrointestinal tract, and central nervous system involvement may rarely occur. Previously sensitized hosts can see an accelerated onset of symptoms occurring 1-3 days after exposure to the antigen.
Related topic: serum sickness-like reaction
Codes
T80.69XA – Other serum reaction due to other serum, initial encounter
SNOMEDCT:
213323001 – Serum rash
402658008 – Serum sickness type vasculitis
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Last Updated:08/04/2025