LISTEN TO EPISODE 128: Apple Podcast Spotify Amazon Music

This podcast was made in partnership with Allergy & Asthma Network.

We thank Novartis for sponsoring this episode. While they support the show, all opinions are our own, and sponsorship doesn’t influence our content or editorial decisions. Any mention of brands is for informational purposes and not an endorsement.


When people get hives or swelling, they often think it’s caused by an allergy. But in the case of chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU), the culprit is often your own immune system. CSU isn’t your typical allergic reaction, instead, it’s frequently an autoimmune condition, where the immune system misfires and activates mast cells without any external trigger.

Dr. Payel Gupta and Kortney unpack what it means for CSU to be autoimmune and autoallergic. They explain how IgE and IgG antibodies can trigger histamine release, leading to hives and swelling. You’ll also learn why allergy testing isn’t useful for diagnosing CSU, and how tests like IgG food sensitivity panels can do more harm than good by leading to unnecessary food avoidance and confusion.

What we cover in our episode about autoimmune CSU and chronic hives:

  • Is CSU an allergy? Why CSU is often mistaken for an allergic reaction—and why standard allergy tests rarely provide helpful answers.

  • How the immune system works in CSU: What mast cells are, how they release histamine, and their central role in chronic spontaneous urticaria.

  • Understanding autoimmune CSU: Learn how the immune system can trigger hives from within, including the roles of IgE and IgG antibodies.

  • Autoimmune hives explained: We explore how CSU can be autoimmune, why the immune system may attack itself, and what Type I and Type IIb autoimmune CSU really mean.

 

Listen now! Apple Podcast Spotify Amazon Music

 
 

Timestamps

Our episode discusses autoimmune csu and autoallergic csu.

01:11 What is CSU

02:32 Mast cells and the immune system

04:11 What a trigger means in CSU

07:28 Why food allergy testing isn’t helpful

09:58 Autoimmune causes of CSU

12:13 Two types of autoimmune CSU

15:35 Type I (autoallergic) CSU

17:53 Type IIb autoimmune CSU

21:17 Four possible causes of CSU

24:15 Key takeaways about autoimmune CSU

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Ep. 127: Management of indolent mastocytosis - A clinical yardstick