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Banner Health News Center  
More snake victims show extreme symptoms
 

by Amanda Lee Myers
Associated Press

A rattlesnake strikes.

The victim experiences extreme pain at the location of the bite, nausea, sometimes diarrhea. Then the mouth and throat swell, making it difficult to breath. The victim gets lightheaded, collapses and goes into shock - all within minutes of the strike.

The potentially deadly symptoms used to be fairly rare, but toxicologists in Arizona, Colorado and California say they're seeing some or all of them more than ever, and that they could be contributing to an increase in fatal rattlesnake bites in Arizona.

At least five people have died from rattlesnake bites in Arizona since 2002 - three or four of them from the extreme symptoms, said Steve Curry, director of medical toxicology at the Banner Poison Control Center in Phoenix.

Curry could recall just five fatal rattlesnake bites in the two decades before 2002.

Scientists and toxicologists can take guesses at what's behind the spike in extreme symptoms, but no one yet knows what's going on. Some say it could be a change in snake venom, a change in the snakes themselves, or something altogether different. ...

... In Arizona, Curry said those who haven't died from the extreme symptoms become critically ill and often take months to recover.

"We're seeing patients now because of the severe shock they've been in, who have had severe strokes, and who have had loss of some intestines because of impaired blood flow and who have gone into kidney failure," he said. "These are things that we did not see at all in years past, but now we see them a few times each summer."

In each state, the snakes responsible for the bites have been different. It's the Southern Pacific Rattlesnake in California, the prairie rattlesnake in Colorado and the Mojave in Arizona.

In letters last week, Arizona authorities notified hundreds of physicians and emergency rooms of the extreme symptoms, which can be mistaken for other ailments and delay the injection of antivenin. Colorado and California authorities say they're taking a wait-and-see approach to the situation.

Read the entire article in The Arizona Republic

Read more about dangerous rattlesnake bites

Learn about dangerous desert dwellers from the Banner Poison Control Center

-For more information, email us or call, 602-747-4000.
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