Talk:Snakebite: Difference between revisions

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imported>Nancy Sculerati MD
(Helpful References for Authors, and Editors)
imported>Nancy Sculerati MD
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(3) Márcia Gallacci, Elaine C. Nunes, Estefânia G. Moreira, Nancy Nascimento, José R. Rogero and Vera S. Vassilieff: Reduction of crotoxin-induced neuromuscular blockade by gamma radiation  • SHORT COMMUNICATION Toxicon, Volume 36, Issue 6, June 1998, Pages 941-945
(3) Márcia Gallacci, Elaine C. Nunes, Estefânia G. Moreira, Nancy Nascimento, José R. Rogero and Vera S. Vassilieff: Reduction of crotoxin-induced neuromuscular blockade by gamma radiation  • SHORT COMMUNICATION Toxicon, Volume 36, Issue 6, June 1998, Pages 941-945
(4) Owuor BO, Kisangau DP: Kenyan medicinal plants used as antivenin: a comparison of plant usage. Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine 2006, 2:7 (1 February 2006) (no clear efficacy, different traditional healers use different plants in same region for same bite- points out inequities of anti-venom availability, and gives statistics on snakebite)

Revision as of 12:40, 30 December 2006

Plan for article

I have just come across this Wikipedia import while authoring in Snake venom. The two articles are best maintained as complementary to each other. The introduction of this article concerns me as a physician.

(1) As best as I can tell, snakebite is a condition that is often mishandled by aggressive first aid efforts, many papers in the English language medical literature document worse outcomes for those who have had incisions and suction attempts by well-meaning people in the field, with a higher rate of orthopedic surgery, for example, needed by those who had such attempts, and an overall better outcome for those who have not.

(2) The key issues are very different in places like the United States, where anti-venom is certainly available if the victim is brought rapidly to a hospital, and the poorer and more rural areas of the tropics in the less developed world where such treatment may be impossible to obtain. It is crucial that this article clearly explains the importance of regional variation in the world and it is a disservice to set a tone, as the article has at present, that there is some standard way to handle "snakebite" that the article will convey to the user.

(3) Further, there are many documented cases of extraordinary (and sometimes very harmful) interventions people have foisted on their friends who were "snakebit", presumeably by a "poison snake" only to discover that the bite was from a non-venemous snake or from another animal altogether, also non-venemous, but not a snake. The approach to first aid for snake bite has to make this scenerio very clear.

(4) The World Health Organization has made known that treatment for snake bite by venemous snakes is a major inequity between the developed and undeveloped world. This should be discussed in the article. Clear reccomendations for snake bite in such areas should be given, and they will not be the same as those for a bite in a region where a helicopter is coming very soon. Nancy Sculerati MD 11:52, 30 December 2006 (CST)

Helpful References for Authors, and Editors

These references are placed in a running list for future use in writing the article.

(1) Carlos F. S. Amaral, Délio Campolina, Mariana B. Dias, Cláudio M. Bueno and Nilton A. Rezende: Tourniquet ineffectiveness to reduce the severity of envenoming after Crotalus durissus snake bite in Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil • SHORT COMMUNICATION Toxicon, Volume 36, Issue 5, May 1998, Pages 805-808

(2) Carlos F. S. Amaral, Delio Campolina, Mariana B. Dias, Claudio M. Bueno, Carlos Chávez-Olortegui, Cláudia L. Penaforte, Carlos R. Diniz and Nilton A. Rezende:Time factor in the detection of circulating whole venom and crotoxin and efficacy of antivenom therapy in patients envenomed by Crotalus durissus • ARTICLE Toxicon, Volume 35, Issue 5, May 1997, Pages 699-704

(3) Márcia Gallacci, Elaine C. Nunes, Estefânia G. Moreira, Nancy Nascimento, José R. Rogero and Vera S. Vassilieff: Reduction of crotoxin-induced neuromuscular blockade by gamma radiation • SHORT COMMUNICATION Toxicon, Volume 36, Issue 6, June 1998, Pages 941-945

(4) Owuor BO, Kisangau DP: Kenyan medicinal plants used as antivenin: a comparison of plant usage. Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine 2006, 2:7 (1 February 2006) (no clear efficacy, different traditional healers use different plants in same region for same bite- points out inequities of anti-venom availability, and gives statistics on snakebite)