Bees (Apidae) and wasps (Vespidae) are venomous stinging insects (class Hymenoptera). A honeybee mostly only attacks when it feels threatened, inflicting a single painful toxic sting. The Africanised ‘killer’ bee, however, is highly aggressive, resulting in massive bee attacks throughout most of the Americas where it has become endemic. Wasps also are aggressive, sting to attack, and can sting multiple times.
Bee sting reaction
Bee venom reaction
Multiple wasp stings
Who gets bee and wasp stings?
Bee and wasp stings mostly occur outdoors, usually around the home. Beekeepers are particularly susceptible, typically receiving many stings over their working lifetime.
In Europe, the prevalence of systemic reactions to bee and wasp stings in the adult population is 0.3–8.9%, higher in beekeepers, lower in children, and are a major cause of anaphylaxis accounting for nearly 50% of adult cases and 20% in children.
What causes bee and wasp stings?
The bee stinger consists of muscles, piercing stylet and lancets, and the venom sac, glands, and bulb. Barbs on the lancets make it impossible for the bee to retract its stinger, leaving the stinger embedded in the wound after the bee escapes. An individual bee therefore can only sting once and dies within a day or two. At least 90% of the venom is delivered in the first 20 seconds. Melittin is the most toxic compound in bee venom, causing most of the pain but only minor allergic reactions. Hyaluronidase is a potent allergen and is responsible for the rapid distribution of the venom in tissues.
Wasps can sting multiple times as they do not leave their stinger behind in the skin.
The severity of the reaction depends on the age and size of the victim, the number of stings, previous sensitisation, and co-morbidities such as atopy, mastocytosis, and immune status.
Honey bee
Bee sting apparatus
Barbs on the lancet prevent withdrawal from the skin
Diagrams from: Pucca MB, Cerni FA, Oliveira IS, et al. Bee updated: current knowledge on bee venom and bee envenoming therapy. Front Immunol. 2019;10:2090.
What are the clinical features of bee and wasp stings?
A bee or wasp sting causes an immediate sharp pain that usually only lasts for a few seconds, followed by redness, swelling, pain, and, following a bee sting, the embedded stinger.
Local inflammatory reaction
Non-allergic individual
Localised pain, swelling, redness, itch
Minor localised reaction resolves within 24 hours
Large localised reaction (>10cm) may persist for up to one week
Impact on quality of life — anxiety resulting in social restriction.
Wasp sting reaction persisted for more than 6 weeks
Wasp sting reaction causing localised vasculitis with purpura
Blistering reaction to a bee sting
How is bee and wasp sting allergy diagnosed?
Both skin testing and serologic tests should be performed on patients with a history of a systemic reaction to a bee or wasp sting, and considered for those with large local reactions.
Allergy skin testing: skin prick testing and intradermal testing using purified venom at least two weeks after a sting reaction.
Serology: serum IgE testing for antibodies against specific insect venoms.
Basophil activation test: useful if the skin test is negative but the sIgE is positive.
Baseline serum tryptase: to identify an unrecognised mast cell disorder which predisposes to severe sting reactions.
What is the differential diagnosis for bee and wasp stings?
If the reaction is mild, bee stings should be treated by first removing the stinger:
Place a firm edge such a knife or credit card against the skin next to the embedded stinger
Apply constant firm pressure and scrape across the skin surface to remove the stinger. This is preferred to using tweezers or fingers, which can accidentally squeeze more venom into the patient.
Treatment of the sting site:
Clean the site with water or disinfectant
Try not to scratch or rub
Apply cold compress to reduce pain and swelling
Simple analgesia
Topical steroid cream or calamine lotion may be applied several times a day until symptoms subside
Oral antihistamines if required
Large localised reaction with severe swelling may require oral steroids.
Treatment for systemic reactions
If a bee or wasp sting causes a severe reaction or anaphylaxis, urgent medical attention should be sought.
Adrenaline (eg, EpiPen®) should be administered if available for anyone with signs of shock, breathing difficulty, or airway swelling.
In hospital, Advanced Life Support (ALS) protocols should be followed.
Those who are at risk of anaphylaxis should be supplied with an EpiPen and counselled, along with their close relatives, responsible adults, or carers, about how and when to use it.
In the Americas where the Africanised bee has become endemic, any individual who has had more than 50 stings (‘massive stinging’) should be observed for anaphylaxis and toxic envenomation.
Venom immunotherapy desensitisation
Gradually increasing doses of insect venom are injected subcutaneously to induce immunological tolerance every few weeks for 3–5 years; continue lifelong in clonal mast cell disorders with history of severe reaction or very severe anaphylaxis reactions. Protection usually lasts 1–3 years after discontinuation.
Insect venoms are commercially available for honey bee, paper wasp, and yellow jacket European wasp.
A Cochrane review reported venom immunotherapy significantly reduces the risk of systemic and large local reactions, and is likely to reduce the risk of anaphylaxis, improving quality of life.
Venom immunotherapy can be recommended for:
Children with systemic sting reactions not limited to the skin
Adults with systemic reactions including those limited to the skin
High risk factors including beekeepers, patients with clonal mast cell disorders
Impaired quality of life following sting reactions
NOT recommended for toxic reactions or those sensitised but with no clinical symptoms.
What is the outcome for bee and wasp stings?
The majority of bee and wasp sting reactions are localised and resolve in hours to days. Episodes are usually rare and simple preventative measures are all that is required. However, sensitisation can develop with repeat episodes, such as can happen to beekeepers and agricultural workers. Following an episode of anaphylaxis, the risk of subsequent anaphylaxis is less than 50%, lower in children.
Bibliography
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