| Literature DB >> 22069593 |
Isabella Panfoli1, Daniela Calzia, Silvia Ravera, Alessandro Morelli.
Abstract
Snake venoms are complex toxin mixtures. Viperidae and Crotalidae venoms, which are hemotoxic, are responsible for most of the envenomations around the world. Administration of antivenins aimed at the neutralization of toxins in humans is prone to potential risks. Neutralization of snake venom toxins has been achieved through different approaches: plant extracts have been utilized in etnomedicine. Direct electric current from low voltage showed neutralizing properties against venom phospholipase A2 and metalloproteases. This mini-review summarizes new achievements in venom key component inhibition. A deeper knowledge of alternative ways to inhibit venom toxins may provide supplemental treatments to serum therapy.Entities:
Keywords: antivenins; direct electric current; etnomedicine; metalloprotease; phosphodiesterase; phospholipase A2; snake venom
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 22069593 PMCID: PMC3153198 DOI: 10.3390/toxins2040417
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Geographic distribution of hemorrhagic venomous snakes.
| Families of hemorrhagic venom snakes | Geographic distribution |
|---|---|
| Elapidae | West Africa, South-East Asia, America, Australia and New Guinea. |
| Colubridae | Worldwide except Antarctica, extremely high latitudes of Eurasia and North America and central and western Australia |
| Crotalidae | Asia and America |
| Viperidae | Europe, Africa, South-East Asia and USA |
Advantages and disadvantages of different approaches to inhibit hemorrhagic venoms.
| Approach for inhibition of hemorrhagic venom | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Horse or sheep-derived polyclonal antivenins | Large-scale use | Adverse reaction or anaphylactic shock |
| High efficacy | Economic and ethic problems | |
| Sheep-derived antibody (CroFab) | Utilized | Economic and ethic problems |
| High efficacy | ||
| Less allergenic | ||
| Polyclonal antibodies purified from chicken egg yolks of immunized hens ( | Promising for the yield of antibody | Economic problems |
| Probably less allergenic | Not utilized | |
| (protocols to be developed and efficacy tested) | ||
| Natural inhibitors | Probably less allergenic | Economic problems |
| Not utilized (protocols to be developed) | ||
| Electric current treatment | Probably not allergenic | Not utilized nor recommended |
| Applicable by a portable system | (lack of scientific basis) |