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Bites and Stings

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Title: Bites and Stings


1
Bites and Stings
  • Temple College
  • EMS Professions

2
Bites and Stings
  • Arthropods
  • Insects
  • Spiders
  • Scorpions
  • Reptiles
  • Pit Vipers
  • Coral Snakes
  • Venomous Marine Life

3
Bite Sting Deaths
  • 50 insects
  • 30 snakes
  • 14 spiders
  • 6 other

4
Hymenoptera
  • Bees, wasps, hornets, yellow-jackets, ants
  • About 25 deaths/year
  • Honeybees 50
  • Yellow-jackets, other wasps 50
  • Problems
  • Allergic reactions
  • Anaphylaxis
  • Toxic venom effects (rare)

5
Local Reactions
  • Sharp, burning pain
  • Itching
  • Edema
  • Extensive reactions may involve entire extremity
  • Tongue/throat stings may cause airway loss

6
Systemic Reactions
  • Mild
  • Diffuse itching
  • Urticaria
  • Swelling distant from sting site
  • Flushing

7
Systemic Reactions
  • Severe
  • Laryngeal edema, upper airway obstruction
  • Severe bronchospasm, difficulty breathing
  • Profound hypotension

Anaphylaxis
8
Anaphylaxis Management
  • Remove stinger (scrape)
  • Manage airway
  • Oxygen, assist ventilations
  • Shock position
  • Epinephrine Auto-Injector
  • Consider ALS back-up

9
Epi Auto-Injector
  • Actions
  • Dilates airways
  • Constricts blood vessels
  • Raises peripheral resistance, BP

10
Epi Auto-Injector
  • Supplied as solution in auto-injector unit

11
Epi Auto-Injector
  • Indication
  • Allergic reaction with
  • Respiratory compromise Rapid, labored breathing
    chest, throat tightness hoarseness, stridor
    wheezing
  • Hypoperfusion Rapid, weak pulse altered level
    of consciousness decreased BP

12
Epi Auto-Injector
  • No contraindications for severe allergic
    reactions

13
Epi Auto-Injector
  • Dosage
  • Adult system 0.3 mg
  • Pediatric system 0.15 mg

14
Epi Auto-Injector
  • Procedure
  • Expose, clean site if possible
  • Remove safety cap
  • 90o to skin lateral thigh midway between waist,
    knee
  • Push against thigh
  • Hold until medication injected (10 seconds)

15
Epi Auto-Injector
  • Side Effects
  • Rapid heart rate
  • Pale skin
  • Headache
  • Chest pain
  • Nausea, vomiting
  • Anxiety

16
Epi Auto-Injector
  • Precautions
  • Oxygen first
  • Monitor vital signs following use

17
Spiders
  • 37,000 species
  • All venomous
  • 50 U.S. species can bite humans
  • 15 U.S. species produce symptoms
  • Only two are dangerous
  • Black widow (Latrodectus mactans)
  • Brown recluse (Loxosceles reclusa)

18
Black Widow
  • As far north as Oregon, New York Common in
    South, Southwest
  • Irregular webs in wood piles, trash dumps,
    outdoor structures, under rocks
  • Occasionally in houses
  • Females rarely leave web
  • Only females bite humans

19
Black Widow
  • Neurotoxic
  • Immediate sharp, stinging pain
  • Muscle cramps in 15 minutes to 2 hours
  • Upper extremity pleuritic chest pain
  • Lower extremity/genitalia abdominal pain,
    rigidity

20
Black Widow
  • Muscle twitching, weakness, paralysis, drooping
    eyelids
  • Sweating, tearing, salivation, increased
    bronchial secretions
  • Anxiety, headache, restlessness, dizziness,
    nausea, vomiting, hypertension
  • Edema, skin rash, conjunctivitis, itching
  • Shock, respiratory depression

21
Black Widow
  • Symptoms peak in few hours, diminish
  • Usually last
  • Some symptomatic up to 4 days
  • Mortality rate unknown
  • Most recover completely

22
Black Widow
  • Treatment
  • Local cold application
  • Symptomatic care
  • Antivenin available

23
Brown Recluse
  • Fiddle-back spider
  • Southeast, South Central U.S.
  • Related species in desert Southwest
  • Shy, nocturnal
  • Dark closets, basements
  • On floors, behind furniture in houses

24
Brown Recluse
  • Local signs/symptoms
  • No pain or only mild stinging
  • Within 2 hours Local pain, blue-gray halo
  • 12 to 18 hours Bleb formation, growing ischemic
    zone
  • 5 to 7 days Aseptic necrosis, necrotic ulcer
  • Severe lesions up to 30 cm in diameter

25
Brown Recluse
  • Systemic signs, symptoms
  • Mild
  • Fever, chills
  • Malaise
  • Nausea, vomiting
  • Joint pain
  • Severe
  • Bleeding disorders
  • Renal failure
  • Convulsions
  • Heart failure
  • Death

26
Brown Recluse
  • Prehospital management
  • Local cold application
  • Wound cleansing
  • Padded splint, bulky dressing

27
Scorpions
  • 40 U.S. species
  • Only one potentially lethal (Centuroides
    sculpturatus)
  • Primarily in Arizona
  • Occasionally in western New Mexico, southeast
    California, northern Mexico, far West Texas

28
Centuroides sculpturatus
  • Local signs, symptoms
  • No local swelling, inflammation
  • Local pain, hypersensitivity

29
Centuroides sculpturatus
  • Systemic signs, symptoms
  • Extreme restlessness, agitation
  • Roving eye movements
  • Poor coordination, slurred speech, difficulty
    swallowing
  • Salivation, wheezing, stridor
  • Tachycardia, tachypnea, hypertension, nausea,
    vomiting

30
Centuroides sculpturatus
  • Treatment
  • Symptomatic, non-specific
  • Antivenin available from Arizona State University
    (National Venomous Desert Animal Study Center)

31
Snakes
  • 45,000 bites per year in U.S.
  • 8,000 from venomous snakes
  • 10 deaths

32
U.S. Venomous Snakes
  • Pit vipers (Crotalidae)
  • Rattlesnakes
  • Copperheads
  • Water moccasins (cotton mouth)
  • Coral snakes (Elapidae)

33
Pit Vipers
  • Heavy bodies
  • Diamond-shaped heads
  • Vertical, elliptical pupil
  • Heat sensing pit on upper lip between eye.
    nostril
  • Erectile fangs
  • Hemotoxic, necrotoxic venom

34
Pit Vipers
  • Rattlesnakes
  • 13 Species
  • 7,000 bites/year
  • 9 to 10 fatalities
  • Most deaths from western diamondback, eastern
    diamondback

35
Pit Vipers
  • Copperhead
  • Deaths VERY rare
  • Minimal edema, pain

36
Pit Vipers
  • Water moccasin
  • Average of one death a year
  • Mild systemic symptoms
  • Potential for severe local tissue injury,
    necrosis

37
Pit Viper Bites
  • Pain, swelling
  • Progressive edema
  • Bruising
  • Blood-filled vesicles

38
Pit Viper Bites
  • Weakness, sweating, nausea, vomiting
  • Tachycardia, hypotension, shock
  • Prolonged clotting
  • Bleeding gums
  • Hematemesis, melena, hematuria
  • Numbness, tingling, neurological symptoms

39
Coral Snake
  • Thin-bodied
  • Small, rounded head
  • Brightly colored
  • Small, non-erectile fangs
  • Injects venom by chewing
  • Venom mostly neurotoxic

Red on yellow, kill a fellow. Red on black, venom
lack.
40
Coral Snake Bite
  • Little, no pain/ swelling
  • Tingling around bite
  • Muscular incoordination
  • Weakness
  • Increased salivation
  • Difficulty swallowing, talking
  • Visual disturbances
  • Respiratory distress, failure
  • Shock

Most deaths occur from respiratory arrest within
36 hours
41
Snakebite Management
  • Calm victim
  • Oxygen
  • Proximal constricting band ( )
  • Clean, bandage wound
  • Immobilize bitten area, keep dependent
  • Watch constricting bands, bandages, splints
    carefully for edema
  • Transport

42
Snakebite Management
  • Do NOT
  • Apply ice
  • Apply arterial tourniquets
  • Cut and suck
  • Use electrical shock
  • Actively attempt to locate snake
  • Bring live venomous snake to hospital

43
Venomous Marine Life
44
Coelenterates
  • Jellyfish, Portuguese man-of-war
  • Stinging cells in tentacles
  • Intense, burning pain
  • Red, hemorrhagic lesions
  • Nausea, vomiting
  • Fever, chills
  • Dyspnea, wheezing, stridor
  • Hypotension, shock
  • Cardiovascular collapse
  • Kill stinging cells with alcohol, vinegar

45
Venomous Fish
  • Sting ray
  • Scorpionfish (Lion fish, Stonefish)
  • Immerse stung area in hot water

46
Sea Urchins
  • Immerse injured area in hot water
  • Use vinegar to dissolve embedded spines
  • Larger spines may require surgical removal
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