Abstract

Because India has long been a land of exotic snakes, snakebite is a serious occupational and rural hazard. Physicians pay very little attention to this occupational hazard despite the high morbidity and death. To study the various clinical profiles and the time interval between bite and start of treatment. Patients were categorized based on the envenomation centred by patient history and definitive bite evidence and graded (I-IV) grounded on a series of manifestations observed in association with the onset of treatment time that distinguishes a venomous from a non-venomous snake attack. Patients were obligating local inflammation owing to tourniquet use besides local innate therapies. Of the 100 patients deliberated, it was evident that there existed a minimal difference between the bites instigated by the snake type. Higher abnormal clotting was perceived on the arrival of patients (78%). While envenomation was predominantly reported to prompt primary coagulation abnormalities (84.32 %), neurotoxin manifestation was also found to occur at a lower rate (11.76 %). Both symptoms were also observed at a minimal level (3.92 %). Higher rates of renal failure were also reported and the clotting time normalization depended largely on patient admission time post-attack. In this investigation, the time gap between the bite and the commencement of therapy was not associated with the time required to normalize the coagulation abnormalities or develop a complication. The study also proposes appropriate protective and awareness measures that could save humankind and these reptiles together.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call