Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Severe pit viper snakebite in dog with long treatment
By Schaer, Michael et al.·Published in Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association·2015·From the Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Severe Pit Viper Envenomation with Extended Clinical Signs and Treatment Complications in a Dog.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 3-year-old dog suffered severe symptoms after being bitten by a pit viper snake. The dog received treatment that included IV fluids, pain relief, and antivenom, but experienced a relapse of symptoms a week later, possibly due to venom being released during surgery to remove dead skin. The treatment required a total of 22 vials of antivenom, which led to some allergic reactions. Fortunately, the dog fully recovered after this intensive treatment.
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Abstract
This manuscript describes the extended clinical abnormalities that can occur in severe snake envenomation and the clinical signs associated with antivenom hypersensitivity in a 3 yr old dog. Treatment consisted of IV fluid therapy, analgesics, a vasopressor, cardiac antiarrhythmia drugs, and polyvalent pit viper antivenom. Following initial response to treatment, relapse of clinical signs occurred. Most interesting was the recrudescence of clinical signs on day 7 that may have been caused by the release of deposited venom during surgical debridement of necrotic skin. The resulting extensive clinical signs required multiple vials of antivenom (22 vials over a 7 day period). Both F(ab')2 antivenom and antivenin (Crotalidae) polyvalent were used in this dog because of availability logistics. It is thought that this large amount of antivenom resulted in type I (anaphylaxis) and type III hypersensitivity (serum sickness) reactions. The dog made a complete clinical recovery. This description of extended, fluctuating clinical abnormalities that were associated with envenomation together with the development of hypersensitivity reactions that were presumably secondary to antivenom administration is information that can be useful for the management of patients afflicted with severe pit viper envenomation.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26355585/