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If a child develops a rash while taking amoxicillin during a viral illness, does this confirm a true penicillin allergy?
Answer: No — it is often a viral exanthem, not a true allergy.Does a reported penicillin allergy in childhood usually persist into adulthood?
Answer: No — most children lose sensitivity or were never truly allergic.Is skin testing required for all children before penicillin delabelling?
Answer: No — low-risk cases can undergo a direct oral challenge.Can gastrointestinal symptoms such as nausea or diarrhoea indicate a true antibiotic allergy?
Answer: No — these are side effects, not allergic reactions.If a child tolerated a cephalosporin, does that rule out penicillin allergy?
Answer: No — cross-reactivity is low but tolerance does not completely exclude penicillin allergy.Is urticaria appearing within one hour of antibiotic administration considered low risk?
Answer: No — it suggests an immediate IgE-mediated reaction.Should children with a history of Stevens-Johnson syndrome undergo oral antibiotic challenge?
Answer: No — severe cutaneous adverse reactions are absolute contraindications.Does a family history of penicillin allergy mean the child should avoid penicillin?
Answer: No — antibiotic allergy is not inherited.If a child tolerated penicillin after a previous reaction, should the allergy label remain?
Answer: No — the label should be removed.Does removing an incorrect antibiotic allergy label affect antimicrobial resistance?
Answer: Yes — it allows use of narrow-spectrum first-line antibiotics, reducing resistance.
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Here are 10 tricky viva-style questions on antibiotic allergy delabelling in children that consultants often ask — designed to probe reasoning, not just memorization:
A 3-year-old developed a mild rash 5 days into amoxicillin for otitis media. How would you approach delabelling?
Trick: Timing suggests a delayed, likely non-IgE reaction — can consider direct oral challenge after history review.A child had penicillin allergy documented at age 2 but has taken amoxicillin twice since age 5 without reaction. Does the allergy still exist?
Trick: Likely not — the label should be removed; tolerance confirms delabelling.Can you use a cephalosporin in a child with a reported penicillin allergy?
Trick: Often yes — cross-reactivity is <1% for second/third generation cephalosporins.If a child had an isolated fever on amoxicillin, is this an allergy?
Trick: No — fever alone is not an allergic manifestation.Why is viral exanthem the most common reason for “penicillin allergy” in children?
Trick: Viral rashes are common in young children and coincide with antibiotic use, leading to mislabelling.A child with suspected anaphylaxis after penicillin presents for delabelling. What is the next step?
Trick: Do not perform oral challenge — refer to specialist; high-risk history requires skin testing or specialist evaluation.Does a family history of penicillin allergy increase your suspicion in the child?
Trick: No — family history alone is not predictive of true allergy.Can penicillin allergy be outgrown? If so, by when?
Trick: Yes — up to 90% of childhood penicillin allergies resolve by adulthood.How does delabelling affect hospital antibiotic protocols?
Trick: Reduces unnecessary broad-spectrum antibiotic use, improving stewardship and lowering resistance.A child tolerated a graded amoxicillin challenge but developed mild pruritus after 24 hours. What do you do?
Trick: Mild delayed symptoms may not preclude delabelling — monitor and document, but do not confuse with immediate IgE reaction.
These are tricky because they require applying clinical reasoning, not just recall, and they test understanding of risk stratification, timing, and stewardship principles.
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Here’s a one-page rapid-fire cheat sheet for paediatric antibiotic allergy delabelling — perfect for quick viva or exam prep:
Paediatric Antibiotic Allergy Delabelling Cheat Sheet
1. Key Principles
Most reported penicillin allergies in children are incorrect (~90%).
Delabelling improves antibiotic choice, reduces resistance, and lowers costs.
Focus on history, risk stratification, and supervised challenge.
2. Risk Stratification
| Risk Level | Features | Delabelling Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Low-risk | Mild rash, non-urticarial, vague history, reaction >24h after starting | Direct oral challenge under observation |
| Moderate-risk | Urticaria, angioedema, mild immediate reaction | Skin testing ± oral challenge |
| High-risk | Anaphylaxis, hypotension, laryngeal edema, SJS/TEN | No challenge — refer to allergy specialist |
3. Common Myths / Tricky Points
Rash during viral infection ≠ allergy
Family history ≠ child allergy
GI upset ≠ allergy
Tolerance to another beta-lactam ≠ guaranteed penicillin tolerance, but low cross-reactivity
Childhood allergy often outgrown (~90% by adulthood)
4. Delabelling Workflow (Simplified)
Detailed history: timing, symptoms, severity, treatment required.
Assess risk category: low, moderate, high.
Low-risk → Direct oral challenge.
Moderate-risk → Consider skin test → oral challenge.
High-risk → Specialist referral, no challenge.
Update records: remove allergy if tolerated, educate parents/caregivers.
5. Oral Challenge Safety
Conduct in medical setting with emergency equipment.
Monitor for immediate reactions (first 1–2 hours) and delayed reactions (up to 48 hours).
Have adrenaline, antihistamines, IV access ready.
6. Antibiotic Stewardship Benefits
Avoids unnecessary broad-spectrum antibiotics.
Reduces resistance, side effects, and healthcare costs.
Supports evidence-based first-line therapy.
If you like, I can also make a visually appealing diagram showing risk stratification + delabelling workflow — it’s super handy for viva recall.
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