Metal allergy
Medical condition / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Metal allergies inflame the skin after it has been in contact with metal. They are a form of allergic contact dermatitis. They are becoming more common, as of 2021[update], except in areas with regulatory countermeasures.
Metal allergy | |
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Allergic dermatitis in reaction to metals | |
Specialty | Allergology, dermatology, immunology |
Symptoms | dermatitis |
Causes | exposure to metals, especially if prolonged or on damaged skin[1] |
Diagnostic method | patch test; some in-vitro blood tests are in development[1] |
Treatment | identifying and avoiding the allergen[1] |
Frequency | increasingly common[quantify][1] |
People may become sensitized to certain metals by skin contact, usually by wearing or holding consumer products (including non-metal products, like textiles and leather treated with metals), or sometimes after exposure at work. Contact with damaged skin makes sensitization more likely. Medical implants may also cause allergic reactions. Diagnosis is by patch test, a method which does not work as well for metals as it does for some other allergens.
Prevention and treatment consists of avoiding the metal allergen; there is no other treatment, as of 2021[update]. It can be difficult to identify and avoid the allergen, because many metals are common in the environment, and some are biologically necessary to humans. Regulations have successfully reduced the rates of some metal allergies in Europe, but are not widespread. The social and economic costs of metal allergies are high.
Metal allergies are type IV allergies; the metals are haptens. The toxicity of some allergenic metals may contribute to the development of allergies.[1]