Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with severe red-bellied black snake bite treated with antivenom
By Lenske, E et al.·Published in Toxicon : official journal of the International Society on Toxinology·2018·Pet Intensive Care Unit (Pet ICU), Australia·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Severe haemolysis and spherocytosis in a dog envenomed by a red-bellied black snake (Pseudechis porphyriacus) and successful treatment with a bivalent whole equine IgG antivenom and blood transfusion.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A dog was brought to the vet after being bitten by a red-bellied black snake, showing symptoms like excessive drooling and facial swelling. The initial treatment with antivenom didn't work as expected, and the dog's blood count dropped dangerously low. After receiving a second dose of antivenom and a blood transfusion, the dog showed significant improvement within 12 hours. Over the next couple of months, the dog's blood levels returned to normal, and the severe anemia caused by the snake bite resolved.
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Abstract
This case report describes a dog envenomed by a red-bellied black snake (RBBS; Pseudechis porphriacus) that experienced severe and life-threatening haemolysis. The dog presented with hypersalivation, facial swelling, mildly prolonged activated clotting time and the absence of neurological deficits. Envenomation was confirmed by positive identification of the snake and retrospective measurement of RBBS specific venom antigen (24 ng/mL) in serum. The dog was initially hospitalised, treated with intravenous fluids and one vial of tiger-brown snake antivenom which is recommended for RBBS envenomation in Australia. However, after 3.5 d the dog's PCV had declined to 15% and the dog was dull and tachycardic. A second vial of tiger-brown antivenom followed by a packed red blood cell transfusion was administered. A rapid clinical improvement within 12 h was observed. No free RBBS venom was detected in serum at any time point after the first vial of antivenom. Longitudinal haematology and biochemical profiling was performed to 62 d post-envenomation and revealed a gradual recovery in the haematocrit to normal reference range. Spherocyte numbers on blood smear were highest at 5 d post-envenomation and gradually declined to undetectable after 62 d. This case highlights the potential for unpredictable, severe and life-threatening anaemia resulting from RBBS envenomation in dogs.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29981813/