Anaphylaxis Protocol: Fast Recognition & Treatment (Modern Guide)
Emergency • Allergy

Anaphylaxis: Recognize Fast. Treat Faster.

This modern summary echoes common elements you’ll see in clinical protocols (e.g., the Compass anaphylaxis pathway) and focuses on practical steps: rapid recognition, intramuscular epinephrine, airway/oxygen, fluids, adjuncts, special situations, and observation.

Educational only—use local policies and a licensed clinician’s judgment.

At a glance

Recognize anaphylaxis

Typical triggers

  • Foods (peanuts, tree nuts, shellfish, milk, egg)
  • Drugs (antibiotics, NSAIDs, anesthetics)
  • Stings (bees/wasps) or latex

Key features (minutes to hours)

  • Skin/mucosa: hives, flushing, angioedema
  • Breathing: wheeze/stridor, airway swelling, hypoxia
  • Circulation: hypotension, syncope, shock
  • GI: crampy pain, vomiting (especially with food triggers)
Treat as anaphylaxis if there’s rapid skin/mucosal involvement plus respiratory or circulatory compromise—or any hypotension after exposure to a likely allergen.

First 60 seconds: do these

  • Call for help and activate emergency response
  • Remove the trigger if possible (stop infusion, scrape stinger)
  • Place patient supine with legs elevated (or position of comfort if vomiting/airway swelling)
  • Give IM epinephrine in the mid-anterolateral thigh—don’t delay
  • Start high-flow oxygen, monitor airway, breathing, circulation

IM epinephrine (first-line)

Population Typical dose Notes Referral
Adults 0.3–0.5 mg IM of 1 mg/mL (1:1000) Repeat every 5–15 min if not improving Epinephrine
Children 0.01 mg/kg IM (max 0.5 mg) Use autoinjector if available (0.15 mg or 0.3 mg) Autoinjector training

IM thigh administration reaches therapeutic levels faster than subcutaneous or deltoid injections.

Airway • Oxygen • Circulation

Airway & breathing

  • Prepare for difficult airway—early involvement of experienced help
  • Nebulized albuterol for bronchospasm
  • Nebulized epinephrine for stridor from upper-airway edema

Circulation

  • Establish IV/IO access and give rapid fluids for hypotension (e.g., 1–2 L isotonic crystalloid in adults; 20 mL/kg in children)
  • Monitor ECG, blood pressure, pulse oximetry

Adjunct medications (after epinephrine)

Adjuncts never replace epinephrine—the only first-line treatment for anaphylaxis.

Refractory shock & epinephrine infusions

  • If hypotension/airway symptoms persist after 2–3 IM doses + fluids, initiate epinephrine infusion with continuous monitoring (ICU-level care)
  • Consider vasopressors per protocol and consult critical care

Observation, discharge & prevention

  • Observe for a possible biphasic reaction (timing per local policy; longer if severe or high-risk)
  • Educate on trigger avoidance; provide written emergency plan

Cited Keywords & Referral Links (gyathshammha.com)

Each keyword links to the main website or a related page on gyathshammha.com.

Bottom line

Give IM epinephrine immediately for suspected anaphylaxis, support airway/oxygen, push fluids for hypotension, add adjuncts as needed, escalate to infusion for refractory cases, and observe for biphasic reactions. Equip patients with autoinjectors and a clear plan.

This page is educational and not a substitute for local protocols or specialist advice.