Author: Dr Amanda Oakley, Dermatologist, Hamilton, New Zealand, 1997. Update: Dr Oakley and Dr Karen Koch, Consultant Dermatologist, WITS Donald Gordon Mediclinic, Johannesburg, South Africa. March 2018. DermNet revision August 2021.
Papularurticaria is a papulovesicular reaction to insect and arachnid bites more common in children than in adults. It presents during the summer or autumn months. It is also called a persistent insect bite reaction.
Who gets papular urticaria?
Papular urticaria most often occurs in children. This is because desensitisation to insect bites has not yet developed.
It may also occur in adults, especially in travellers to new environments.
What is the cause of papular urticaria?
Papular urticaria is thought to be an immunological reaction to insect bites. The reaction settles after a few months or years, as the person becomes desensitised to the bites. The initial bite is rarely noticed.
Fleas and mites that live on cats and dogs are most often responsible.
Fleas are easily seen with the naked eye but can be difficult to get rid of. Fleas produce many eggs, which become larvae and pupae. The average cat has only twenty fleas, but may be surrounded by 20,000 of them.
Mites are too small to see easily but are an equally common cause of papular urticaria.
Animals are repeatedly infested and must be treated every few weeks with a leave-on insecticide.
Not everyone with papular urticaria has pets, and it can sometimes be difficult to work out what a patient is reacting to. There have been reports of reactions to mosquitoes, bed bugs, gnats, bird mites, carpet beetles, caterpillars, and other insects.
What are the clinical features of papular urticaria?
Papular urticaria presents with clusters of itchy red bumps (papules) without systemic symptoms.
Most often on legs and other uncovered areas such as forearms and face
Sometimes scattered in small groups all over the body
Appear every few days during the summer or autumn months
Range from 0.2–2 cm in diameter
Each papule has a central punctum
May present as crops of fluid-filled blisters
New lesionsdevelop just as old ones start to clear
A new bite may provoke reactivation of old ones
The spots remain for days to weeks and can leave postinflammatory pigmentation or hypopigmented scars, especially if they have been scratched deeply.
Papular urticaria is usually a clinical diagnosis. A biopsy may support the diagnosis, as insect bites have a characteristic microscopic appearance.
The histopathology of papular urticaria includes mild dermaloedema, extravasation of erythrocytes, interstitialeosinophils, and exocytosis of lymphocytes.Vasculitic features may be noted.
What is the treatment for papular urticaria?
Preventative measures
Wear protective clothing
Insect repellents can be applied to exposed skin to prevent insect bites when outdoors
Insecticides can rid the house, workplace, or school, of insects. Obtain professional help from a pest control company if necessary.
Papular urticaria is normally self-limiting. The immunological basis of this reaction means that it may take months or even years for children to become desensitised to the offending insect. Papular urticaria may clear up on holiday or after moving house.
Occasionally the eruption can clear for years and then recur unexpectedly.
References
Cuéllar A, Rodríguez A, Halpert E, et al. Specific pattern of flea antigen recognition by IgG subclass and IgE during the progression of papular urticaria caused by flea bite. Allergol Immunopathol (Madr). 2010;38(4):197–202. doi:10.1016/j.aller.2009.09.012 Journal
Demain JG. Papular urticaria and things that bite in the night. Curr Allergy Asthma Rep. 2003;3(4):291–303. PubMed.
Hernandez RG, Cohen BA. Insect bite-induced hypersensitivity and the SCRATCH principles: a new approach to papular urticaria. Pediatrics. 2006;118(1):e189–96. PubMed.
Kamath S, Kenner-Bell B. Infestations, bites, and insect repellents. Pediatr Ann. 2020;49(3):e124-31. doi:10.3928/19382359-20200214-01 PubMed
Singh S, Mann BK. Insect bite reactions. Indian J Dermatol Venereol Leprol. 2013;79(2):151-64. doi:10.4103/0378-6323.107629 Journal
Steen CJ, Carbonaro PA, Schwartz RA. Arthropods in dermatology. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2004;50(6):819–42, quiz 42-4. PubMed.