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Home :: Skin Disorders :: Snake Bites Snake Bites - Symptoms & Treatment of SnakebitesEach year, poisonous snakes bite about 7,000 people in the United States, resulting in about 20 deaths. Such bites are most common during summer afternoons in grassy or rocky habitats. Poisonous snakebites are medical emergencies. With prompt, correct treatment, they need not be fatal.reason of Snake BitesThe only poisonous snakes in the United States are pit vipers (Crotalidae) & coral snakes (Elapidae). Pit vipers include rattlesnakes, water moccasins (cottonmouths), & copperheads. They have a pitted depression between their eyes & nostrils & two fangs, ¾" to 1¼" (2 to 3 cm) long. Because fangs may break off or grow behind old ones, some snakes may have one, three, or four fangs. Because coral snakes are nocturnal & placid, their bites are less common than pit viper bites; pit vipers are also nocturnal but are more active. The fangs of coral snakes are short but have teeth behind them. Coral snakes have distinctive red, black, & yellow bands (yellow bands always border red ones), tend to bite with a chewing motion, & may leave multiple fang marks, small lacerations, & much tissue destruction.Signs & symptoms of Snake BitesMost snakebites happen on the arms & legs, below the elbow or knee. Bites to the Human head or trunk are most dangerous, but any bite into a blood vessel is dangerous, regardless of location. Most pit viper bites that result in envenomation cause immediate & progressively severe pain & edema (the entire extremity may swell within a few hours), local elevation in skin temperature, fever, skin discoloration, petechiae, ecchymoses, blebs, blisters, bloody wound discharge, & local necrosis. Because pit viper venom is neurotoxic, pit viper bites may cause local & facial numbness & tingling, fasciculation & twitching of skeletal muscles, seizures (especially in children), extreme anxiety, difficulty speaking, fainting, weakness, dizziness, excessive sweating, occasional paralysis, mild to severe respiratory distress, headache, blurred vision, marked thirst and, in severe envenomation, coma & death. Pit viper venom may also impair coagulation & cause hematemesis, hematuria, melena, bleeding gums, & internal bleeding. Other symptoms of pit viper bites include tachycardia, lymphadenopathy, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, hypotension, & shock. The reaction to coral snakebite is usually delayed-sometimes up to several hours. These snakebites cause little or no local tissue reaction (local pain, swelling, or necrosis). However, because coral snake venom is neurotoxic, a reaction can progress swiftly, producing such effects as local paresthesia, drowsiness, nausea, vomiting, difficulty swallowing, marked salivation, dysphonia, ptosis, blurred vision, miosis, respiratory distress & possible respiratory failure, loss of muscle coordination and, possibly, shock with cardiovascular collapse & death. DiagnosisThe patient's history & account of the injury, observation of fang marks, snake identification (when possible), & progressive symptoms of envenomation all point to poisonous snakebite. Laboratory test results help identify the extent of envenomation & provide guidelines for supportive treatment. Abnormal test results in poisonous snakebites may include the following: . prolonged bleeding time & partial thromboplastin time
Treatment of Snake BitesPrompt, appropriate first aid can reduce venom absorption & prevent severe symptoms.
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