Literature DB >> 9637363

Hugh Alistair Reid OBE MD: investigation and treatment of snake bite.

B J Hawgood.   

Abstract

Alistair Reid was an outstanding clinician, epidemiologist and scientist. At the Penang General Hospital, Malaya, his careful observation of sea snake poisoning revealed that sea snake venoms were myotoxic in man leading to generalized rhabdomyolysis, and were not neurotoxic as observed in animals. In 1961, Reid founded and became the first Honorary Director of the Penang Institute of Snake and Venom Research. Effective treatment of sea snake poisoning required specific antivenom which was produced at the Commonwealth Serum Laboratories in Melbourne from Enhydrina schistosa venom supplied by the Institute. From the low frequency of envenoming following bites, Reid concluded that snakes on the defensive when biting man seldom injected much venom. He provided clinical guidelines to assess the degree of envenoming, and the correct dose of specific antivenom to be used in the treatment of snake bite in Malaya. Reid demonstrated that the non-clotting blood of patients bitten by the pit viper, Calloselasma rhodostoma [Ancistrodon rhodostoma] was due to venom-induced defibrination. From his clinical experience of these patients, Reid suggested that a defibrinating derivative of C. rhodostoma venom might have a useful role in the treatment of deep vein thrombosis. This led to Arvin (ancrod) being used clinically from 1968. After leaving Malaya in 1964, Alistair Reid joined the staff of the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, as Senior Lecturer. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for detecting and quantifying snake venom and venom-antibody was developed at the Liverpool Venom Research Unit: this proved useful in the diagnosis of snake bite, in epidemiological studies of envenoming patterns, and in screening of antivenom potency. In 1977, Dr H. Alistair Reid became Head of the WHO Collaborative Centre for the Control of Antivenoms based at Liverpool.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9637363     DOI: 10.1016/s0041-0101(97)00082-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Toxicon        ISSN: 0041-0101            Impact factor:   3.033


  3 in total

1.  Emergency treatment of a snake bite: Pearls from literature.

Authors:  Syed Moied Ahmed; Mohib Ahmed; Abu Nadeem; Jyotsna Mahajan; Adarash Choudhary; Jyotishka Pal
Journal:  J Emerg Trauma Shock       Date:  2008-07

2.  Anti-cobra venom activity of plant Andrographis paniculata and its comparison with polyvalent anti-snake venom.

Authors:  S Jhon Premendran; Kartik J Salwe; Swanand Pathak; Ranjana Brahmane; K Manimekalai
Journal:  J Nat Sci Biol Med       Date:  2011-07

Review 3.  Diagnosis of snakebite and the importance of immunological tests in venom research.

Authors:  R David G Theakston; Gavin D Laing
Journal:  Toxins (Basel)       Date:  2014-05-23       Impact factor: 4.546

  3 in total

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