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Year 2024

Volume: 14 , Issue: 2

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Panacea Journal of Medical Sciences


A study of clinical profile of snake bite at a tertiary care centre


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Original Article

Author Details : Nallathambi M, Anurekha G*, Paranthakan C

Volume : 14, Issue : 1, Year : 2024

Article Page : 255-259

https://10.18231/j.pjms.2024.045

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Abstract

Introduction: 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.
Objective: To study the various clinical profiles and the time interval between bite and start of treatment.
Materials and Methods: 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.
Results: 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.
Conclusion: The study also proposes appropriate protective and awareness measures that could save humankind and these reptiles together.
 
Keywords: Coagulation, Hemotoxic, Envenomation, Renal failure, Non­venomous, Neurotoxin


How to cite : Nallathambi M, Anurekha G, Paranthakan C, A study of clinical profile of snake bite at a tertiary care centre. Panacea J Med Sci 2024;14(1):255-259

Copyright © 2024 by author(s) and Panacea J Med Sci. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (creativecommons.org)