Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Signs of eastern brown snake bites in dogs and cats - treatment
By Padula, A M & Leister, E·Published in Toxicon : official journal of the International Society on Toxinology·2017·Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Australia·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Eastern brown snake (Pseudonaja textilis) envenomation in dogs and cats: Clinical signs, coagulation changes, brown snake venom antigen levels and treatment with a novel caprylic acid fractionated bivalent whole IgG equine antivenom.
Plain-English summary
A group of 16 dogs and cats was treated for snake bites from the eastern brown snake, which caused symptoms like paralysis and bleeding issues. The pets were given a new type of antivenom that proved to be very effective, with venom levels dropping to undetectable amounts in some cases after treatment. Unfortunately, three pets were euthanized shortly after arriving at the clinic due to severe conditions or cost concerns. For those that received the antivenom, many showed improvement, and the treatment was found to be significantly more effective than other available options.
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Abstract
This report describes the diagnosis and treatment of 16 confirmed cases of snakebite from the Australian eastern brown snake (Pseudonaja textilis) in dogs and cats. The clinical signs, brown snake venom antigen concentrations, coagulation parameters, and treatment outcomes following administration of an experimental caprylic acid fractionated bivalent whole IgG antivenom are documented. A brown snake venom antigen specific sandwich ELISA was used to retrospectively quantify venom levels in serum and urine. The characteristic clinical signs of envenomation in all cases were neurotoxicity to a variable extent and coagulation disturbances. The median serum venom concentration at presentation was 122 ng/mL and ranged from 1.9 to 3607 ng/mL. The median urine venom concentration at presentation was 55 ng/mL and ranged from 3.3 to 2604 ng/mL. Mechanical ventilation was used to successfully support respiration in three severely paralysed cases for 1-30 h. In four cases where serum samples were available post-antivenom treatment, venom was no longer detectable. Coagulation parameters measured on citrated plasma samples collected prior to antivenom from each case were abnormally prolonged to variable degrees in all cases. Three cases (2 dogs; 1 cat) were euthanized within four hours of presentation for either cost based reasons (2) or poor prognosis (1). One dog developed massive and potentially fatal pulmonary haemorrhage and was euthanazed. In vitro testing of the venom procoagulant neutralising efficacy of the experimental antivenom demonstrated it was 9.6-72 times more effective when compared to two other commercial veterinary antivenom products. This is the first detailed report of a case series of P. textilis envenomation in dogs and cats. The envenomation syndrome in dogs and cats differed to that reported humans, dominated by neurotoxicity and coagulopathy; unlike in humans, where coagulopathy is of primary clinical significance.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28830752/