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Monocled Cobra bite - Ventilation & Antivenin HELP
McSwain, Norman E Jr. nmcswai at tulane.eduTue Jul 1 00:13:11 BST 2008
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I would bet on supply and demand. Not enough demand to spend the research dollars Norman Norman McSwain Jr, MD FACS Trauma Director Charity Hospital Professor of Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine 504 988 5111 -----Original Message----- From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org [mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org] On Behalf Of Errington Thompson Sent: Monday, June 30, 2008 2:26 PM To: 'Trauma & Critical Care mailing list'; ccm-l at ccm-l.org Subject: RE: Monocled Cobra bite - Ventilation & Antivenin HELP Why hasn't we made an antivenin for cobras that doesn't have the problems of serum sickness? Why don't we have e. coli bacteria cranking this out? Is the problem funding or something else? Errington C. Thompson, MD Trauma/Surgical Critical Care Talk Show Host - WPEK www.whereistheoutrage.net Asheville, NC -----Original Message----- From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org [mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org] On Behalf Of KMATTOX at aol.com Sent: Monday, June 30, 2008 1:20 PM To: SURGINET at listserv.utoronto.ca Cc: trauma-list at trauma.org; ccm-l at ccm-l.org Subject: Monocled Cobra bite - Ventilation & Antivenin HELP Our patient continues to improve. The best advice we would achieve via the textbooks, journals, telephone calls, and internet was to intubate, support ventilation, and give antivenin. Which we did. NOW FOR SPECIFIC SCIENCE. I have looked hard to answer my rhetorical question regarding antivenin in this particular case. From everything I have read, and now been told from friends on these three list servers, the most important thing was to support ventilation until the effects of the bite have worn off. I have followed the conventional wisdom and now given him genius specific antivenin (6 vials of the stuff). He sure will develop serum sickness within 3-6 weeks. He is now sensitized to horse serum should he need antivenin in the future. So have I created un necessary problems by giving him antivenin that he really did not need. Could I have treated him better by merely intubating him and giving him neostigmine or other drugs. >From what I have read in the past 24 hours I really really cannot find scientific justification for giving the antivenin once I intubated him. Because it had to be brought in from a distant city, the antivenin was administered several hours after the bite exposure. Can the intellectual clinical scientist on these web sites give me ANY science to support this continuing urban legend of giving antivenin to poisonous snake bite victims like this one? Kenneth L. Mattox, MD Houston In a message dated 6/30/2008 5:56:52 A.M. Central Daylight Time, rangraj at GMAIL.COM writes: vipers are different from cobras, with vipers you need to worry about DIC, clotting factors and such, with cobras its more a matter of ventilating them till they get better. Which they generally do.You've done the important thing, which is getting the patient intubated in time. rangraj On Mon, Jun 30, 2008 at 3:27 PM, Evgeny S. Pobegalov <_docpes at gmail.com_ (mailto:docpes at gmail.com) > wrote: Dear Professor Mattox, what about renal function of this patient? I have never seen cobra bites, but when being in South East Asia I did have some chances to see patients bitten by local vipers (as poisonous as cobras but more dangerous), and I remember renal failure to be an issue with them. -- Evgeny S. Pobegalov, Russia -- -- mailto: _docpes at gmail.com_ (mailto:docpes at gmail.com) http://www.trauma.org/index.php/community/list/url/http:list.ftech.net/pipermail/trauma-list/2008-July/_http://private.peterlink.ru/thorax_ (http://private.peterlink.ru/thorax) - personal http://www.trauma.org/index.php/community/list/url/http:list.ftech.net/pipermail/trauma-list/2008-July/_http://private.peterlink.ru/tas_ (http://private.peterlink.ru/tas) - official -- Lt Col Rangraj Setlur Associate Professor Department of Anaesthesiology and Critical Care Armed Forces Medical College Pune India **************Gas prices getting you down? Search AOL Autos for fuel-efficient used cars. (http://autos.aol.com/used?ncid=aolaut00050000000007) -- trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG To change your settings or unsubscribe visit: http://www.trauma.org/index.php?/community/ -- trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG To change your settings or unsubscribe visit: http://www.trauma.org/index.php?/community/
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