Red Flush

If your face turns red after a couple glasses of wine, you’re not alone. Many people experience facial flushing when they drink alcohol. The technical term for this condition is “ alcohol flush. Flushed definition is - tinged with red especially in the face (as from shame, illness, heat, or physical exertion). How to use flushed in a sentence.

  1. Red Flush Alcohol
  2. Red Flushed Face Symptoms
  3. Flushing When Eating
  4. Red Flush Mount Ceiling Light

What Is Carcinoid Syndrome?

Carcinoid syndrome is a set of symptoms that may occur in patients who have carcinoid tumors (neuroendocrine tumors, or NET, often in the gastrointestinal [GI] tract or lungs). Not all people with carcinoid tumors have carcinoid syndrome.

Carcinoid tumors may arise in many locations, but they are most commonly found in the GI tract or the lungs.

Carcinoid syndrome and serotonin


Carcinoid syndrome occurs when carcinoid tumors overproduce substances such as serotonin that normally circulate throughout your body.

When excess serotonin reaches tissues in the GI tract, the lungs, or the skin, it causes some of the symptoms of carcinoid syndrome. The two main symptoms of carcinoid syndrome are flushing and diarrhea.

What happens when carcinoid tumors spread to the liver?


Carcinoid tumors often do not produce noticeable symptoms until they spread (metastasize) to the liver. That’s because most of the blood circulation from the GI tract must pass through the liver before it reaches the rest of the body.

The liver has enzymes that prevent excess serotonin and other substances produced by the carcinoid tumors from causing symptoms. When carcinoid tumors spread to the liver, the substances they overproduce can more easily reach your blood stream and tissues where they can cause symptoms.

Carcinoid syndrome symptoms


If you have been diagnosed with carcinoid syndrome, you probably already have experienced some of the symptoms, such as flushing, wheezing, and diarrhea. Because many of the early symptoms of carcinoid syndrome are difficult to diagnose, many people live with the symptoms for years before learning what the problem is.

Identifying the symptoms of carcinoid syndrome early is a benefit in fighting the condition. This section may help you better understand the symptoms of carcinoid syndrome. Not every person with carcinoid syndrome will have all of these symptoms.

This graph shows the frequency of signs and symptoms of carcinoid syndrome occurring in a sample of 138 cases.

Learn More About Symptoms

Red Flush

It is important to always keep your health care team informed if you experience any of these symptoms, so you can better manage your disease.

Over 90% of people with carcinoid syndrome experience flushing. Flushing is an intense blush, a deep red or purple hue that appears suddenly on the face or neck, although the flush may appear on the upper back or legs as well. The flush can be triggered by emotions, eating, or drinking alcohol or hot liquids. When it occurs, you may feel warm or unpleasant sensations in the affected areas, and may experience a rapid heartbeat. The flush can last from a few minutes to hours, and in some cases, may not fade at all. The stage of carcinoid syndrome can determine how long flushing lasts. In more severe cases, facial skin sometimes thickens and discolors. Flushing in carcinoid syndrome is more likely to be “dry” flushing (flushing that is not accompanied by sweating) rather than “wet” flushing (flushing that is accompanied by sweating).

About 78% of people with carcinoid syndrome experience diarrhea, which can happen with flushing or by itself. Stools are watery and the diarrhea can be mild or severe. Episodes can occur several times a day and interfere with daily life. Patients with severe cases of diarrhea often have trouble leaving their homes for work, social functions, or activities that require being away from home or on the move for a long time. Diarrhea can drain your body of water, causing dehydration and electrolyte loss. Without enough water and electrolytes, proper digestion cannot occur, preventing your body from receiving the nutrients it needs while worsening weight loss, weakness, and fatigue. Diarrhea resulting from carcinoid syndrome may also occur at night (nocturnal diarrhea). The occurrence of nocturnal diarrhea can be an important clue that a person is experiencing carcinoid syndrome, because this does not usually occur with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS).

One of the more serious symptoms of carcinoid syndrome is heart valvular lesions, a condition in which excess serotonin causes injury to the valves in the heart. This leads to a unique set of problems with the way your heart functions, called carcinoid heart disease. Cardiac disease develops in 11% to 66% of carcinoid syndrome patients.

Red Flush Alcohol

People with carcinoid syndrome may experience abdominal cramping, a painful condition in which normal bowel movements are prevented. These cramping episodes may occasionally develop into intestinal obstruction, a serious condition that requires medical attention.

People with carcinoid syndrome sometimes develop telangiectasia, reddish spots or veins that appear most often on the face, chest, or arms and are caused by prolonged flushing.
Peripheral edema, a swelling of the ankles, legs, hands and arms, or neck and face, may also occur in people with carcinoid syndrome. This symptom may be a sign of heart problems.

Red Flushed Face Symptoms

Exposure of lung tissues to abnormally high levels of certain substances can cause the blood vessels to constrict and narrow the airway passages, making it difficult to breathe. This wheezing can be mistaken for asthma.

Cyanosis refers to characteristic bluish skin spots that can develop in people with carcinoid syndrome. The spots may appear after flushing, and are produced by a lack of oxygenated blood circulation in the affected areas.

Although the causes are not known, people with carcinoid syndrome are more likely than the general population to develop arthritis.

Pellagra is a disease of nutritional deficiency that causes symptoms such as skin rash due to a lack of niacin (vitamin B3).
Flushing
Facial flushing in a 22-year-old ALDH2 heterozygote before (left) and after (right) drinking alcohol.
SpecialtyDermatology

Flushing is to become markedly red in the face and often other areas of the skin, from various physiological conditions. Flushing is generally distinguished, despite a close physiological relation between them, from blushing, which is milder, generally restricted to the face, cheeks or ears, and generally assumed to reflect emotional stress, such as embarrassment, anger, or romantic stimulation. Flushing is also a cardinal symptom of carcinoid syndrome—the syndrome that results from hormones (often serotonin or histamine) being secreted into systemic circulation.

Causes[edit]

  • abrupt cessation of physical exertion (resulting in heart output in excess of current muscular need for blood flow)
  • abdominal cutaneous nerve entrapment syndrome (ACNES), usually in patients who have had abdominal surgery
  • antiestrogens such as tamoxifen
  • atropine poisoning
  • body contact with warm or hot water (hot tub, bath, shower)
  • butorphanol reaction with some narcotic analgesics (since butorphanol is also an antagonist)
  • caffeine consumption
  • carcinoid tumor
  • chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), especially emphysema (also known as 'pink puffer')
  • cluster headache attack or headache
  • compression of the nerve by the sixth thoracic vertebrae
  • coughing, particularly severe coughing fits
  • emotions: anger, embarrassment (for this reason it is also called erythema pudoris, from the Latinized Greek word for 'redness' and the Latin 'of embarrassment')
  • homocystinuria (flushing across the cheeks)
  • hyperstimulation of the parasympathetic nervous system, especially the vagus nerve
  • inflammation (for example, caused by allergic reaction or infection)
  • iron poisoning[1]
  • Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction (caused by antibiotics)
  • mixing an antibiotic with alcohol
  • niacin (vitamin B3)
  • powerful vasodilators, such as dihydropyridinecalcium channel blockers
  • severe pain
  • sexual arousal, especially orgasm (see following section)
  • sexual intercourse (see below)
  • sneezing (red nose)
  • some recreational drugs, such as alcohol, heroin, cocaine and amphetamines
  • spicy foods
  • sunburn (erythema)

Sex flush[edit]

Commonly referred to as the sex flush, vasocongestion (increased blood flow) of the skin can occur during all four phases of the human sexual response cycle. Studies show that the sex flush occurs in approximately 50–75% of females and 25% of males, yet not consistently. The sex flush tends to occur more often under warmer conditions and may not appear at all under lower temperatures.

During the female sex flush, pinkish spots develop under the breasts, then spread to the breasts, torso, face, hands, soles of the feet, and possibly over the entire body. Vasocongestion is also responsible for the darkening of the clitoris and the walls of the vagina during sexual arousal. During the male sex flush, the coloration of the skin develops less consistently than in the female, but typically starts with the epigastrium (upper abdomen), spreads across the chest, then continues to the neck, face, forehead, back, and sometimes, shoulders and forearms.

The sex flush typically disappears soon after reaching orgasm, but in other cases, may take up to two hours or more, and sometimes intense sweating occurs simultaneously.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^Heller, Jacob L. (10 Aug 2017). 'Iron overdose'. MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia. National Institutes of Health. Retrieved 15 July 2019.

External links[edit]

Flushing When Eating

Classification
  • ICD-10: R23.2
  • ICD-9-CM: 782.62
  • MeSH: D005483
  • DiseasesDB: 19110

Red Flush Mount Ceiling Light

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