Title: Menge T. B.
1UPDATES ON VACCINESANTISNAKE VENOM
- Menge T. B.
- B. Pharm M.Sc (Pharmacology Toxicology)
2EPIDEMIOLOGY
- There are about 3000 species of snakes worldwide
- About 300 are of medical significance (i.e.
venomous). - Africa
- 400 snake species
- most are relatively harmless.
- Approximately 100 species are medically important
- 30 species have been known to cause death.
3EPIDEMIOLOGY
- It has been estimated that about 1,000,000 snake
bites occur annually around the world, 40,000 of
which result in deaths. - In Africa 400-1000
- Nigeria, recent statistics show that 80 of all
hospital admissions in some districts are due to
snake bites, - South Africa, 30-80 hospital admissions per
100,000 persons are due to snake bites. - In India 30,000 deaths occur annually due to
snake bites. - Malindi District Hospital records. Jan. 2007 -
Aug. 2008 - Total No. of cases 76
- Treated with antivenom 21 (but query on 3
cases) - Fatalities 1
4Bioken, Watamu, Kenya Nov. 1997 - Nov. 2007
Species Species
Dangerous Puff adders 33 (2 fatal)
Dangerous Cobras 17 (3 fatal)
Dangerous Black mamba 5 (2 fatal)
Dangerous Green mamba 6
Dangerous Boomslang 2 (1 fatal)
Dangerous Twig snake 1
Venom in eyes 11
Non - lethal Mole vipers 61
Non - lethal Green night adder 2
Harmless - 29
Others 20
TOTAL TOTAL
Antivenom provided 94 Antivenom provided 94 Antivenom provided 94 Antivenom provided 94
5CLASSIFICATION OF SNAKES
- Medically important snakes can be divided into
four families - The Colubridae
- A very large group of snakes
- Non-venomous sand snakes, egg eaters, mole
snakes (blind snakes), house snakes and bush
snakes. - Medically significant snakes in this group are
the Boomslang and the Vine (Twig) snake - Their venom is haemotoxic.
- The Elapidae
- This group includes cobras, mambas and coral
snakes. - have large hollow fangs at the front of the jaw
- The venom of these snakes is neurotoxic
- Some cobra spit venom that is cytotoxic as well.
6CLASSIFICATION OF SNAKES cont
- The Viperidae
- This group covers adders.
- They have hollow hinged fangs on the front of the
jaw. - The venom of this group is mostly cytotoxic some
species have neurotoxins. - The Hydrophidae
- This group is composed of sea snakes.
- The venom is neurotoxic (and especially
myotoxic), - Most bites are not associated with serious
envenomation because of their low venom output
and short fangs .
7VENOM COMPOSITION AND FUNCTION
- Snake venom is one of the most biochemically and
pharmacologically complex toxins known. - The most important venom components that cause
serious clinical effects are - pro-coagulant enzymes,
- cytolytic or necrotic toxins,
- haemolytic and myolytic phospholipases A2,
- pre- and postsynaptic neurotoxins, and
- haemorrhagins.
8VENOM COMPOSITION AND FUNCTION cont
- Snake venoms vary in their composition from
species to species but also within a single
species - (i) throughout the geographical distribution of
that species, - (ii) at different seasons of the year,
- (iii) as the snake grows older (ontogenic
variation). - This contributes to the enormous and fascinating
clinical diversity of snakebites
9FUNCTION OF VENOM
- 1.To immobilize prey
- 2.To digest prey
- 3.To defend from harm
10MECHANISM OF TOXICITY AND ROUTES OF POISONING
- The predominant mechanisms are
- Cytotoxicity,
- Haemotoxicity,
- Neurotoxicity
- Myotoxicity.
- Venom excretion occurs primarily through the
kidneys - Some of the complications of envenomation are due
to nephrotoxicity.
11CLINICAL PATTERNS OF ENVENOMING
- Cytotoxic envenoming
- This is characterized by painful and progressive
swelling with blood-stained tissue fluid leaking
from the bite wound, hypovolaemic shock,
blistering and bruising. - The victim will complain of severe pain at the
bite site and throughout the affected limb and
painful and tender enlargement of lymph glands
draining the bite site. - resulting from cytolysis, ischaemia, blood
extravasations and direct proteolytic activity,
irreversible death of tissue may occur
(necrosis/gangrene).
12CYTOTOXIC symptoms
13CYTOTOXIC EFFECTS
14CLINICAL PATTERNS OF ENVENOMING
- Neurotoxic envenoming
- This is characterized by moderate or absent local
swelling, progressive descending paralysis
starting with drooping eyelids (ptosis) and
paralysis of eye movements causing double vision. - There may be painful and tender enlargement of
lymph glands draining the bite site. - The patient may vomit, the saliva may become
profuse and stringy, and eventually there may be
difficulties with swallowing and breathing. - Species involved include black and green mambas
and non-spitting cobras
15CLINICAL PATTERNS OF ENVENOMING
- NEUROTOXICITY/MYOTOXICITY
- Neurotoxic venoms cause paralysis due to their
effects on the nervous system. - predominantly associated with Elapids and
Hydrophids - There are two types of neurotoxins
- 1. Neurotoxins of hydrophids bind to post
synaptic acetylcholine receptors resulting in
paralysis. Respiratory paralysis is the primary
cause of immediate death. - 2. Neurotoxins of Elapids (cobras and mambas)
have pre-synaptic action which inhibits the
release of acetylcholine at myeneural junction.
16Neurotoxic Effects
17Neurotoxic effects
- Neurotoxicity from Berg adder Bitis atropos bite
- The patient is contracting the (forehead)
frontalis muscle in an attempt to open his eyes
despite bilateral ptosis
18Neurotoxicity
- Black mamba bite (Dendroaspis polylepis) showing
ptosis, external ophthalmoplegia and facial
paralysis recovering on the day after the bite
19CLINICAL PATTERNS OF ENVENOMING
- Haemorrhagic envenoming
- This is characterized by bleeding from
- the gums
- gastro-intestinal and genito-urinary tracts
- recent and partly healed wounds.
- Species involved include saw-scaled/carpet
vipers, puff adders, Gaboon and rhinoceros
vipers, boomslang, and vine snakes.
20Haemorrhagic envenoming
- Saw-scaled viper Echis ocellatus bite, showing
bleeding from gingival sulci
- Saw-scaled viper Echis ocellatus bite, showing
bleeding from gingival sulciand into floor of
mouth
21Haemorrhagic envenoming
- Saw-scaled viper Echis ocellatus bite, persistent
profuse bleeding from multiple incisions at the
site of bite inflicted 18 hours earlier
- Saw-scaled viper Echis ocellatus bite on foot 36
hours previously, persistent bleeding from
incision made to attach black snake stone
22CLINICAL PATTERNS OF ENVENOMING
- COAGULOPATHIES
- These are
- the most significant
- most unpredictable
- systemic manifestations
- Snakes from all families have been implicated
- Both anti coagulant and pro coagulant properties
have been described
23SYSTEMIC EFFECTS. Haematotoxicity
- ANTICOAGULATION
- Results from
- i) Interference of activation of clotting factors
- ii) Fibrinolytic and fibrinogenolytic activity.
- iii) Direct or indirect activation of plasminogen
- PRO-COAGULATION
- i) Direct action on phospholipids.
- ii) convert prothrombin to thrombin by cleaving
appropriate peptides - THROMBOCYTOPENIA
- Occurs with or without other coagulopathies and
may result from - intravascular clotting and consumption of
platelets - sequestration of platelets by the venom.
- The degree of thrombocytopenia may directly
correlate with the severity of envenomation. - DISSEMINATED INTRAVASCULAR COAGULATION
- Snake venom constituents may interact at various
points of coagulation cascade to activate
clotting factors or prothrombin directly.
Significant amounts of thrombin like enzymes have
also been identified
24MANAGEMENT OF SNAKE BITES
- Snake venom is primarily intended to assist the
snake in - capturing prey
- digestion.
- Its effects are therefore far more effective in
overcoming prey (e.g. rodents) than humans
25ANTIVENOMS
- Antivenoms are the only effective specific
treatments or antidotes for snakebite. - They are raised in large domestic animals
(usually horses, donkeys or sheep) by
hyperimmunizing them against a single snake venom
(producing a monovalent/monospecific antivenom)
or against venoms of several species of snakes
whose bites are common and frequently lead to
severe envenoming in the geographical area where
the particular antivenom is intended to be used
(producing a polyvalent/polyspecific antivenom).
26PRODUCTION OF ANTIVENOMS
- The venom of a single species of snake may vary
in composition and antigenicity. - As a result, pooled venom from many (20-50)
individual specimens of each snake species should
be used for antivenom production. - These individuals should come from different
parts of the geographical range and should
include some younger (smaller) specimens to take
these factors into account.
27PRODUCTION OF ANTIVENOMS
- After animals have completed the immunization
schedule, plasma is collected, preferably by
plasmapheresis (so that the red blood cells can
be returned to the donor animal) and is passed
through several processes designed to produce
either - refined whole IgG antibodies or
- IgG antibody fragments such as F(ab')2 or Fab,
which are free of other plasma proteins such as
albumin, fragments such as Fc, aggregates (a
major cause of antivenom reactions), pyrogens and
microbes. - It is then either lyophilized or stored as a
liquid.
28USE OF ANTIVENIN
- Antivenom neutralizes a fixed amount of venom.
- Since snakes inject the same amount of venom
into adults and children, the same dose/volume of
antivenom must be administered to children as to
adults. - Antivenom can be effective as long as venom is
still active in the patients body causing
symptoms of systemic envenoming. - These may persist for several days or even weeks
after the bite (e.g. incoagulable blood and
bleeding after saw-scaled viper bites).
29INDICATIONS FOR ANTIVENOM
- When used correctly, antivenin can effectively
reverse systemic poisoning - Antivenin should not be administered routinely in
all cases of snake bites as it can cause severe
acute reactions or fatality.
30Indications for antivenom treatment after bites
by African snakes
- Systemic envenoming
- 1. Neurotoxicity
- 2. Spontaneous systemic bleeding
- 3. Incoagulable blood (20MWBCT)
- 4. Cardiovascular abnormality hypotension,
shock, arrhythmia, abnormal electrocardiogram - Local envenoming by species known to cause local
necrosis - 1. Extensive swelling (involving more than half
the bitten limb) - 2. Rapidly progressive swelling
- 3. Bites on fingers and toes
- Bitis, Echis, Cerastes, Macrovipera spp. and
spitting cobras
31Sources of antivenom
- There is great concern about the supply of
antivenom for Africa. - Several Indian producers, including Serum
Institute of India (SII), Vins Bioproducts and
Bharat Serum and Vaccines Ltd. (Asna Antivenom),
export antivenoms to Africa. - The clinical efficacy and safety of these
antivenoms needs to be established. Confirm that
the venoms used for their production are from
African and not Asian snake species. - Beware of misleading labelling implying that they
have activity against African rather than Asian
cobra and saw-scaled viper venoms
32Resolutions from Dakar Conference (April 2011)
- 1. Snake and scorpion bites exist and need to be
handled urgently and competently. - 2.Need for Epidemiological Surveys.
- 3.Training of Health Workers (Inclusion in the
Medical Curriculum). - 4.Need for individual country capacity building.
- 5. Address the issue of FAKE and unsuitable
antivenoms. - 6. Joint procurement by countries in a given
regional block from one regional producer to
ensure price reduction. - 7. Feedback meetings.
- 8. Intense Pharmacovigilance by relevant
government authorities. - 9. Funding for production or purchase of
antivenoms through subsidies. - 10. Collaboration with Traditional Healers and
more research into their Herbal preparations