Anaphylactoid reactions range from urticaria and itching, to bronchospasm and facial and laryngeal edema.
Other signs and symptoms include fever and facial and supraglottic edema.
Stress, lack of sleep, and facial edema (swelling) can contribute to dark circles.
This condition is also known as chronic upper facial erythematous edema, Morbihan's disease, morbus Morbihan, and rosaceous lymphedema.
It is accompanied by fever, neutrophilia, and sometimes by facial edema, hepatitis and eosinophilia.
The patient who experienced persistent confusion also developed severe cutaneouserythema, pruritus, and facial edema, at which time treatment was permanently discontinued.
Patients can also display jugular venous distention and facial edema.
Five to seven days after the appearance of symptoms, facial edema and fever may occur.
Abnormal deposits of mucin are responsible for the non-pitting facial edema seen in untreated hypothryoidism.
Oculo-respiratory syndrome is a usually transient condition characterized by bilateral conjunctivitis, facial edema, and upper respiratory symptoms following influenza immunization.