| Literature DB >> 25866646 |
Toru Hifumi1, Atsushi Sakai2, Yutaka Kondo3, Akihiko Yamamoto4, Nobuya Morine5, Manabu Ato6, Keigo Shibayama4, Kazuo Umezawa7, Nobuaki Kiriu8, Hiroshi Kato8, Yuichi Koido8, Junichi Inoue9, Kenya Kawakita1, Yasuhiro Kuroda1.
Abstract
Snake bites are life-threatening injuries that can require intensive care. The diagnosis and treatment of venomous snake bites is sometimes difficult for clinicians because sufficient information has not been provided in clinical practice. Here we review the literature to present the proper management of bites by mamushi, habu, and yamakagashi snakes, which widely inhabit Japan and other Asian countries. No definite diagnostic markers or kits are available for clinical practice; therefore, definitive diagnosis of snake-venom poisoning requires positive identification of the snake and observation of the clinical manifestations of envenomation. Mamushi (Gloydius blomhoffii) bites cause swelling and pain that spreads gradually from the bite site. The platelet count gradually decreases due to the platelet aggregation activity of the venom and can decrease to <100,000/mm(3). If the venom gets directly injected into the blood vessel, the platelet count rapidly decreases to <10,000/mm(3) within 1 h after the bite. Habu (Protobothrops flavoviridis) bites result in swelling within 30 min. Severe cases manifest not only local signs but also general symptoms such as vomiting, cyanosis, loss of consciousness, and hypotension. Yamakagashi (Rhabdophis tigrinus) bites induce life-threatening hemorrhagic symptoms and severe disseminated intravascular coagulation with a fibrinolytic phenotype, resulting in hypofibrinogenemia and increased levels of fibrinogen degradation products. Previously recommended first-aid measures such as tourniquets, incision, and suction are strongly discouraged. Once airway, breathing, and circulation have been established, a rapid, detailed history should be obtained. If a snake bite is suspected, hospital admission should be considered for further follow-up. All venomous snake bites can be effectively treated with antivenom. Side effects of antivenom should be prevented by sufficient preparation. Approved antivenoms for mamushi and habu are available. Yamakagashi antivenom is used as an off-label drug in Japan, requiring clinicians to join a clinical research group for its use in clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: Antivenom; Habu; Mamushi; Yamakagashi
Year: 2015 PMID: 25866646 PMCID: PMC4393627 DOI: 10.1186/s40560-015-0081-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Intensive Care ISSN: 2052-0492
Figure 1Color variation in mamushi. (a) Common color; (b, c) color variations; (d) melanistic variant. Photographs courtesy of the Japan Snake Institute.
Figure 2Locations of fangs in mamushi, habu, and yamakagashi snakes. (a) Mamushi fangs are about 5 mm long, with very thin tips. The snakes often have two fangs on each side; (b) habu fangs are 1.5 to 2 cm long; (c) yamakagashi fangs are only about 2 mm long and are located slightly back in the mouth. Photographs courtesy of the Japan Snake Institute (a, c) and the Okinawa Prefectural Institute of Health and Environment (b).
Figure 3Color variations in habu from different geographical locations. Habu from (a) Amami Oshima; (b) Tokunoshima; and (c, d) Okinawa. Photographs courtesy of the Okinawa Prefectural Institute of Health and Environment.
Figure 4Color variation in yamakagashi from different geographical locations. Yamakagashi from (a) Kanto and Tohoku; (b) Chubu and Kinki; and (c) Chugoku and Sikoku; (d) melanistic variant. Photographs courtesy of the Japan Snake Institute.
Enzymes in the snake venoms
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| Non-hemorrhagic metalloproteinase | + | + | + |
| HR1 | + | + | |
| HR2 | + | + | |
| Phospholipase A2 | + | + | |
| TAME esterase | + | + | |
| L-amino acid oxidase | + | + | |
| Hyaluronidase | + | + | |
| Phosphodiesterase | + | + | |
| Phosphomonoesterase | + | + | |
| ATPase | + | + | |
| 5′-nucleotidase | + | + | |
| Endonuclease | + | + | |
| NAD-nucleosidase | + | ± | |
| Alginine ester hydrolase | + | + | |
| Thrombin-like enzyme | + | + | ± |
| Endopeptidase | + | + | |
| Bradykinin-releasing enzyme | + | + |
+ indicates the presence of the enzyme, − indicates the absence of the enzyme, blank space indicates unknown whether the venom contains the given enzyme, HR 1 hemorrhagic factor-1, HR-2 hemorrhagic factor-2, TAME p-toluenesulfonyl-L-arginine methyl ester, ATPase adenosine triphosphatase, NAD nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide.
Typical symptoms and laboratory data to be evaluated
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| Typical symptoms | Local pain, swelling, severely decreased platelet counta, diplopia, blurred vision, nauseab, vomitingb, stomachacheb, diarrheab, cyanosisb | Local swelling, necrosis, bleeding at the bite site, vomitingb, cyanosisb, loss of consciousnessb, hypotensionb, compartment syndrome | Nasal bleeding, gum bleeding, bleeding from the bite site, headacheb |
| Laboratory data to be evaluated routinely | CBC, CK, BUN, Cre, Na, K, Cl, Fibrinogen, FDP, d-dimer, PT, APTT | ||
| Typical laboratory findings | CK↑ | FDP >100 μg/mL | |
| Plt <10,000/μLa | Fibrinogen <100 mg/dL | ||
| Laboratory data to be evaluated additionally | Myoglobin, CK-MB | Myoglobin | AT-III, TAT, PIC |
CBC complete blood count, Plt platelet count, CK creatine kinase, BUN blood urea nitrogen, Cre creatinine, FDP fibrinogen degradation products, PT prothrombin time, APTT activated partial thromboplastin time AT-III antithrombin III, TAT thrombin-antithrombin III complex, PIC plasmin-α2-plasmin inhibitor complex.
aVenom is injected into the blood vessel directly.
bIn severe cases.
Indication and incidence of side effects in antivenom
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| Indication | Mamushi grade ≧ III | N/A | Fibrinogen <100 mg/dL |
| Side effects | |||
| Anaphylaxis | 2.4%–9.0% | 11% | 0% |
| Serum sickness disease | N/A | 24.2% | N/A |
N/A not applicable.
Figure 5The clinical decision algorithm for Mamushi bites. IV fluid, intravenous fluid administration.