| Literature DB >> 21291549 |
Eric J Lavonas1, Anne-Michelle Ruha, William Banner, Vikhyat Bebarta, Jeffrey N Bernstein, Sean P Bush, William P Kerns, William H Richardson, Steven A Seifert, David A Tanen, Steve C Curry, Richard C Dart.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Envenomation by crotaline snakes (rattlesnake, cottonmouth, copperhead) is a complex, potentially lethal condition affecting thousands of people in the United States each year. Treatment of crotaline envenomation is not standardized, and significant variation in practice exists.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21291549 PMCID: PMC3042971 DOI: 10.1186/1471-227X-11-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Emerg Med ISSN: 1471-227X
Panel Member Qualifications
| Panel Member | Board Certification | Practice Setting | Practice Location |
|---|---|---|---|
| William Banner, MD, PhD | Pediatrics, pediatric critical care, medical toxicology | Clinical toxicology service, pediatric intensive care unit | Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA |
| Vikhyat Bebarta, MD | Emergency medicine, medical toxicology | Clinical toxicology service, emergency department | San Antonio, Texas, USA |
| Jeffrey Bernstein, MD | Emergency medicine, medical toxicology, clinical pharmacology | Emergency department, poison center | Miami, Florida, USA |
| Sean P. Bush, MD | Emergency medicine | Envenomations clinical service, emergency department | Loma Linda, California, USA |
| Richard C. Dart, MD | Emergency medicine, medical toxicology | Clinical toxicology service, poison center | Denver, Colorado, USA |
| William P. Kerns, II, MD | Emergency medicine, medical toxicology | Clinical toxicology service, emergency department, poison center | Charlotte, North Carolina, USA |
| William H. Richardson, MD | Emergency medicine, medical toxicology | Emergency department, poison center | Columbia, South Carolina, USA |
| Anne-Michelle Ruha, MD | Emergency medicine, medical toxicology | Clinical toxicology service, emergency department, poison center | Phoenix, Arizona, USA |
| Steven A. Seifert, MD | Emergency medicine, medical toxicology | Clinical toxicology service, emergency department, poison center | Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA |
| David A. Tanen, MD | Emergency medicine, medical toxicology | Clinical toxicology service, emergency department, poison center | San Diego, California, USA |
Search Strategy
| Database | Pub Med | Ovid Medline | EMBASE |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1/1/1990 - 12/31/2009 | 1/1/1990 - 12/31/2009 | 1990 - 2009 | |
| Crotalid venoms/PO [poisoning] | Crotalid venoms/PO [poisoning] | Crotalid venoms AND [intoxication OR toxicity] | |
| Crotalid venoms/TO [toxicity] | Crotalid venoms/TO [toxicity] | Snake venoms AND [intoxication OR toxicity] | |
| Snake venoms/PO | Snake venoms/PO | Snake bites AND [drug therapy OR therapy] | |
| Snake venoms/TO | Snake venoms/TO | ||
| Snake bites/DT [drug therapy] | Snake bites/DT [drug therapy] | Viperidae | |
| Snake bites/TH [therapy] | Snake bites/TH [therapy] | Agkistrodon | |
| Viperidae | Viperidae | Crotalus | |
| Agkistrodon | Agkistrodon | FabAV | |
| Crotalus | Crotalus | Crotaline immune Fab | |
| CroFab | CroFab | ||
| Crotaline immune Fab | Crotaline immune Fab | ||
| 1711 | |||
Searches were conducted on January 6, 2010 and were limited to English language and humans. After removal of 1,748 duplicate citations, 339 additional citations were excluded based on the keywords rat(s), mouse, mice, rabbit(s), cellular, in vivo, or in vitro. Hand-search of the titles and abstracts of the remaining 1,951 citations yielded 91 citations that appeared to contain original data about crotaline snake envenomation patients who were either treated with Fab antivenom or managed without antivenom. Full-text copies of these 91 articles and abstracts were obtained and made available to the project team in a computer data file. Of these, 42 articles and abstracts were identified as containing data relevant to the key questions identified in preliminary panel discussions. These 42 references were reproduced and made available during the in-person panel meeting.
Figure 1Unified Treatment Algorithm for the Management of Pit Viper Snakebite in the United States.
Figure 2Factors Influencing Observation Time for Patients with Apparent Dry Bites and Initially Minor Envenomations Managed Without Antivenom.