Now that summer has arrived, the avid Nordic Walkers may already have seen snakes here and there. Australia is famous for its snakes. While everybody knows that snakes are around, what to do when we see a snake or moreso when we're bitten often comes with rather weird advice.
Here's an acount of Rob Timmings, an educator for health professionals (some of you may have seen posts on Facebook).
Let's start with a few interesting stats:
- 3000 bites are reported annually
- 300-500 hospitalisations
- 2-3 deaths annually
The average time to death is (only) 12 hours. The urban myth that you are bitten in the yard and die before you can walk from your chook pen back to the house is a load of rubbish.
While not new, the management of snake bite (like a flood/fire evacuation plan or CPR) should be refreshed each season.
Here's a basic overview - there are five genus of snakes that will harm us (seriously): Browns, Blacks, Adders, Tigers and Taipans
All snake venom is made up of huge proteins (like egg white). When bitten, a snake injects some venom into the meat of your limb (NOT into your blood). This venom can not be absorbed into the blood stream from the bite site; it travels in a fluid transport system in your body called the lymphatic system (not the blood stream).
Now this fluid (lymph) is moved differently to blood. Your heart pumps blood around, so even when you are lying dead still, your blood still circulates around the body. Lymph fluid is different. It moves around with physical muscle movement like bending your arm, bending knees, wriggling fingers and toes, walking/exercise etc.
Now here is the thing. Lymph fluid becomes blood after these lymph vessels converge to form one of two large vessels (lymphatic trunks)which are connected to veins at the base of the neck.
When bitten, the venom has been injected into this lymph fluid (which makes up the bulk of the water in your tissues). The only way that the venom can get into your blood stream is to be moved from the bite site in the lymphatic vessels. The only way to do this, is to physically move the limbs that were bitten.
Therefore - stay still!!! Venom can’t move if the victim doesn’t move. Remember people are not bitten into their blood stream.
In the 1980s a technique called Pressure immobilisation bandaging was developed to further retard venom movement. It completely stops venom /lymph transport toward the blood stream. A firm roll bandage is applied directly over the bite site (don’t wash the area). Follow these three steps:
Step 1 - apply a bandage over the bite site, to an area about 10cm above and below the bite.
Step 2 - using another elastic roller bandage, apply a firm wrap from Fingers/toes all the way to the armpit/groin. The bandage needs to be firm, but not so tight that it causes fingers or toes to turn purple or white; about the tension of a sprain bandage.
Step 3 - splint the limb so the patient can’t walk or bend the limb.
Do not:
- cut, incise or suck the venom.
- EVER use a tourniquet
- remove the shirt or pants - just bandage over the top of clothing.
- forget: movement (like wriggling out of a shirt or pants) causes venom movement.
- try to catch, kill or identify the snake
In hospital we NO LONGER NEED to know the type of snake; it doesn’t change treatment. Five years ago we would do a test on the bite, blood or urine to identify the snake so the correct anti venom can be used. Now we don’t do this. Our new Antivenom neutralises the venoms of all the 5 listed snake genus, so it doesn’t matter what snake bit the patient. Polyvalent is our one shot wonder, stocked in all hospitals, so most hospitals no longer stock specific Antivenins.
Australian snakes tend to have 3 main effects in differing degrees.
- Bleeding - internally and bruising
- Muscles paralysed causing difficulty talking, moving & breathing
- Pain - in some snakes severe muscle pain in the limb, and days later the bite site can break down forming a nasty wound.
An allergy to snakes is rarer than winning the lottery twice.
Please note: not all bitten people are envenomated and only those starting to show symptoms above are given antivenom.
Source: This article was published on Facebook by Rob Timmings. Rob runs a medical/nursing education business Teaching nurses, doctors and paramedics.