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Antivenom

Antivenom, also known as antivenin, venom antiserum, and antivenom immunoglobulin, is a specific treatment for envenomation. It is composed of antibodies and used to treat certain venomous bites and stings.[1] Antivenoms are recommended only if there is significant toxicity or a high risk of toxicity.[1] The specific antivenom needed depends on the species involved.[1] It is given by injection.[1]

Antivenom
Milking a snake for the production of antivenom
Clinical data
Other namesantivenin, antivenene
AHFS/Drugs.comMonograph
Routes of
administration
injection
ATC code
Identifiers
ChemSpider
  • none

Side effects may be severe.[1] They include serum sickness, shortness of breath, and allergic reactions including anaphylaxis.[1] Antivenom is traditionally made by collecting venom from the relevant animal and injecting small amounts of it into a domestic animal.[2] The antibodies that form are then collected from the domestic animal's blood and purified.[2]

Versions are available for spider bites, snake bites, fish stings, and scorpion stings.[3] Due to the high cost of producing antibody-based antivenoms and their short shelf lives when not refrigerated, alternative methods of production of antivenoms are being actively explored.[4] One such different method of production involves production from bacteria.[5] Another approach is to develop targeted drugs (which, unlike antibodies, are usually synthetic and easier to manufacture at scale).[6]

Antivenom was first developed in the late 19th century and came into common use in the 1950s.[2][7] It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines.[8]

Medical uses edit

Antivenom is used to treat certain venomous bites and stings.[1] They are recommended only if there is significant toxicity or a high risk of toxicity.[1] The specific antivenom needed depends on the venomous species involved.[1]

In the US, approved antivenom, including for pit viper (rattlesnake, copperhead and water moccasin) snakebite, is based on a purified product made in sheep known as CroFab.[9] It was approved by the FDA in October 2000. U.S. coral snake antivenom is no longer manufactured, and remaining stocks of in-date antivenom for coral snakebite expired in fall 2009, leaving the U.S. without a coral snake antivenom. Efforts are being made to obtain approval for a coral snake antivenom produced in Mexico which would work against U.S. coral snakebite, but such approval remains speculative.[10][11]

As an alternative when conventional antivenom is not available, hospitals sometimes use an intravenous version of the antiparalytic drug neostigmine to delay the effects of neurotoxic envenomation through snakebite.[12] Some promising research results have also been reported for administering the drug nasally as a "universal antivenom" for neurotoxic snakebite treatment.[13]

A monovalent antivenom is specific for one toxin or species, while a polyvalent one is effective against multiple toxins or species.[14]

The majority of antivenoms (including all snake antivenoms) are administered intravenously; however, stonefish and redback spider antivenoms are given intramuscularly. The intramuscular route has been questioned in some situations as not uniformly effective.[15]

Antivenoms bind to and neutralize the venom, halting further damage, but do not reverse damage already done. Thus, they should be given as soon as possible after the venom has been injected, but are of some benefit as long as venom is present in the body. Since the advent of antivenoms, some bites which were previously invariably fatal have become only rarely fatal provided that the antivenom is given soon enough.[citation needed]

Side effects edit

Antivenoms are purified from animal serum by several processes and may contain other serum proteins that can act as immunogens. Some individuals may react to the antivenom with an immediate hypersensitivity reaction (anaphylaxis) or a delayed hypersensitivity (serum sickness) reaction, and antivenom should, therefore, be used with caution. Although rare, severe hypersensitivity reactions including anaphylaxis to antivenom are possible.[16] Despite this caution, antivenom is typically the sole effective treatment for a life-threatening condition, and once the precautions for managing these reactions are in place, an anaphylactoid reaction is not grounds to refuse to give antivenom if otherwise indicated. Although it is a popular myth that a person allergic to horses "cannot" be given antivenom, the side effects are manageable, and antivenom should be given rapidly as the side effects can be managed.[17]

Method of preparation edit

Most antivenoms are prepared by freeze drying (synonym, cryodesiccation, lyophilization). The process involves freezing the antisera, followed by application of high vacuum. This causes frozen water to sublimate. Sera is reduced to powder with no water content. In such an environment, microorganisms and enzymes cannot degrade the antivenom, and it can be stored for up to 5 years [at normal temperatures]. Liquid antivenoms may also be stored for 5 years, but they must be stored at low temperatures [<8 degrees Celsius (or 46 degrees Fahrenheit)].[18]

Mechanism edit

Antivenoms act by binding to and neutralizing venoms. The principle of antivenom is based on that of vaccines, developed by Edward Jenner; however, instead of inducing immunity in the person directly, it is induced in a host animal and the hyperimmunized serum is transfused into the person.[19] The host animals may include horses, donkeys, goats, sheep, rabbits, chickens, llamas, and camels.[20] In addition, opossums are being studied for antivenom production.[21] Antivenoms for medical use are often preserved as freeze-dried ampoules, but some are available only in liquid form and must be kept refrigerated. They are not immediately inactivated by heat, however, so a minor gap in the cold chain is not disastrous.

History edit

The use of serum from immunized animals as a treatment for disease was pioneered in 1890 by Emil von Behring and Shibasaburo Kitasato, who first demonstrated that the infectious diseases diphtheria and tetanus could be prevented or cured using transfusions from an immune animal to a susceptible one.[22] On February 10, 1894, Albert Calmette at the Pasteur Institute, and independently Césaire Auguste Phisalix and Gabriel Bertrand at the National Museum of National History in France, announced that they had achieved the same result—treatment of a vulnerable animal with serum from an immunized one—this time using snake venom as the source of protection and disease.[23] Calmette went on subsequently to immunize horses using venom from Indian cobras, and the resulting Serum Antivenimeux (antivenomous serum) became the first commercially-available antivenom product.[24][25]

Natural immunity of snakes to their own venom was observed at least as long ago as 1767, by Felice Fontana in his work Ricerche Fisiche sopra il Veleno della Vipera (Physical Research on the Venom of the Viper).[26] Surgeon-Major Edward Nicholson wrote in the November 1870 Madras Medical Journal that he had witnessed a Burmese snake-catcher inoculating himself with cobra venom. However, the snake-catcher was unsure whether this was actually effective and therefore continued to treat his snakes with care. Nicholson, along with other Britons, began to consider that venom might provide its own cure. Although Scottish surgeon Patrick Russell had noted in the late 18th century that snakes were not affected by their own venom,[27] it was not until the late 19th century that Joseph Fayrer, Lawrence Waddell, and others began to consider venom-based remedies again. However, they and other naturalists working in India did not have the funding to fully develop their theories. In 1895 Sir Thomas Fraser, Professor of Medicine at the University of Edinburgh, picked up Fayrer and Waddell's research to produce a serum to act against cobra venom. His "antivenene" was effective in the laboratory, but failed to make an impact as the public were focused on contemporary Pasteurian discoveries.[28]

In 1901, Vital Brazil, working at the Instituto Butantan in São Paulo, Brazil, developed the first monovalent and polyvalent antivenoms for Central and South American Crotalus and Bothrops genera,[29] as well as for certain species of venomous spiders, scorpions, and frogs. In Mexico in 1905, Daniel Vergara Lope developed an antivenom against scorpion venom, by immunizing dogs.[30] In Australia, the Commonwealth Serum Laboratories (CSL) began antivenom research in the 1920s. CSL has developed antivenoms for the redback spider, funnel-web spiders and all deadly Australian snakes.[31] In the USA, the H.K. Mulford company began producing "Nearctic Crotalidae antivenin"[32] in 1927, via a consortium called the Antivenin Institute of America.[33]

Over time, a variety of improvements have been made in the specificity, potency, and purity of antivenom products, including "salting out" with ammonium sulphate or caprylic acid,[34] enzymatic reduction of antibodies with papain or with pepsin, affinity purification, and a variety of other measures.[35] Many equine facilities now use plasmapheresis to collect blood plasma instead of blood serum.[36][37]

Availability edit

There is an overall shortage of antivenom to treat snakebites. Because of this shortage, clinical researchers are considering whether lower doses may be as effective as higher doses in severe neurotoxic snake envenoming.[38]

Antivenom undergoes successive price markups after manufacturing, by licencees, wholesalers and hospitals.[39] When weighed against profitability (especially for sale in poorer regions), the result is that many snake antivenoms, world-wide, are very expensive. Availability, from region to region, also varies.[40]

Internationally, antivenoms must conform to the standards of pharmacopoeia and the World Health Organization (WHO).[20][41] Antivenoms have been developed for the venoms associated with the following animals:[42]

Spiders edit

Antivenom Species Country
Funnel web spider antivenom Sydney funnel-web spider Australia
Soro antiaracnidico Brazilian wandering spider Brazil
Soro antiloxoscelico Recluse spider Brazil
Suero antiloxoscelico Chilean recluse Chile
Aracmyn All species of Loxosceles and Latrodectus Mexico
Redback spider antivenom Redback spider Australia
Black widow spider (Latrodectus Mactans) antivenin (equine origin) Southern black widow spider United States
SAIMR spider antivenom Button spider South Africa
Anti-Latrodectus antivenom Black widow spider Argentina

Acarids edit

Antivenom Species Country
Tick antivenom Paralysis tick Australia

Insects edit

Antivenom Species Country
soro antilonomico Lonomia obliqua caterpillar Brazil

Scorpions edit

Antivenom Species Country
Scorpion Venom Anti Serum (India) Purified lyophilized enzyme refined Equine Immunoglobulins Buthus tamulus India
ANTISCORP - Premium (Scorpion Venom Antiserum North Africa) Purified lyophilized enzyme refined Equine Immunoglobulins Androctonus amoerexi and Leiurus quinquestraiatus India
INOSCORPI MENA (Middle East and North Africa) Androctonus australis, Androctonus mauritanicus, Androctonus crassicauda, Buthus occitanus mardochei, Buthus occitanus occitanus, Leiurus quinquestriatus quinquestriatus, Leiurus quinquestriatus hebreus Spain
Alacramyn Centruroides limpidus, C. noxius, C. suffusus Mexico
Suero Antialacran Centruroides limpidus, C. noxius, C. suffusus Mexico
Tunisian polyvalent antivenom All Iranian scorpions Tunisia
Anti-Scorpion Venom Serum I.P. (AScVS) Indian red scorpion India
Anti-scorpionique Androctonus spp., Buthus spp. Algeria
Scorpion antivenom Black scorpion, Buthus occitanus Morocco
Soro antiscorpionico Tityus spp. Brazil
SAIMR scorpion antivenin Parabuthus spp. South Africa
Purified prevalent Anti-Scorpion Serum (equine source) Leiurus spp. and Androctonus scorpions Egypt

Marine animals edit

Antivenom Species Country
CSL box jellyfish antivenom Box jellyfish Australia
CSL stonefish antivenom Stonefish Australia

Snakes edit

Antivenom Species Country
PANAF PREMIUM (Sub-Sahara Africa) Purified lyophilized enzyme refined Equine Immunoglobulins [43] Echis ocellatus, Echis leucogaster, Echis carinatus, Bitis arietans, Bitis rhinoceros, Bitis nasicornis, Bitis gabonica, Dendroaspis polylepis, Dendroaspis viridis, Dendroaspis angusticeps, Dendroaspis jamesoni, Naja nigricollis, Naja melanoleuca and Naja haje India
Snake Venom Antiserum (India) Purified lyophilized enzyme refined Equine Immunoglobulins Naja naja, Vipera russelii and Echis carinatus India
INOSERP MENA (Middle East and North Africa) Bitis arietans, Cerastes cerastes, Cerastes gasperettii,Cerastes vipera, Daboia deserti, Daboia mauritanica, Daboia palaestinae, Echis carinatus sochureki, Echis coloratus, Echis khosatzkii, Echis leucogaster, Echis megalocephalus, Echis omanensis, Echis pyramidum, Macrovipera lebetina obtusa, Macrovipera lebetina transmediterranea, Macrovipera lebetina turanica, Montivipera bornmuelleri, Montivipera raddei kurdistanica, Pseuocerastes fieldi, Pseudocerastes persicus, Vipera latastei, Naja haje, Naja nubiae, Naja pallida and Walterinnesia aegyptia Spain
INOSERP PAN-AFRICA (Sub-Sahara Africa) Echis ocellatus, Bitis arietans, Dendroaspis polylepis and Naja nigricollis Spain
EchiTAbG (Sub-Sahara Africa)[44] Echis ocellatus, Echis pyramidum Wales, UK
Polyvalent snake antivenom Anavip South American rattlesnake Crotalus durissus and fer-de-lance Bothrops asper Mexico (Instituto Bioclon); South America
Polyvalent snake antivenom Saw-scaled viper Echis carinatus, Russell's viper Daboia russelli, spectacled cobra Naja naja, common krait Bungarus caeruleus India
Death adder antivenom Death adder Australia
Taipan antivenom Taipan Australia
Black snake antivenom Pseudechis spp. Australia
Tiger snake antivenom Australian copperheads, tiger snakes, Pseudechis spp., rough-scaled snake Australia
Brown snake antivenom Brown snakes Australia
Polyvalent snake antivenom Australian snakes as listed above Australia
Sea snake antivenom Sea snakes Australia
Vipera tab Vipera spp. UK
Polyvalent crotalid antivenin (CroFab—Crotalidae Polyvalent Immune Fab (Ovine)) North American pit vipers (all rattlesnakes, copperheads, and cottonmouths) North America
Soro antibotropicocrotalico Pit vipers and rattlesnakes Brazil
Antielapidico Coral snakes Brazil
SAIMR polyvalent antivenom Mambas, cobras, Rinkhalses, puff adders (Unsuitable small adders: B. worthingtoni, B. atropos, B. caudalis, B. cornuta, B. heraldica, B. inornata, B. peringueyi, B. schneideri, B. xeropaga) South Africa[45]
SAIMR echis antivenom Saw-scaled vipers South Africa
SAIMR Boomslang antivenom Boomslang South Africa
Panamerican serum Coral snakes Costa Rica
Anticoral Coral snakes Costa Rica
Anti-mipartitus antivenom Coral snakes Costa Rica
Anticoral monovalent Coral snakes Costa Rica
Antimicrurus Coral snakes Argentina
Coralmyn Coral snakes Mexico
Anti-micruricoscorales Coral snakes Colombia
crotalidae immune F(ab')2 (equine)) (Anavip) North American species of Crotalinae US

Terminology edit

The name "antivenin" comes from the French word venin, meaning venom, which in turn was derived from Latin venenum, meaning poison.[46]

Historically, the term antivenin was predominant around the world, its first published use being in 1895.[47] In 1981, the World Health Organization decided that the preferred terminology in the English language would be venom and antivenom rather than venin and antivenin or venen and antivenene.[48]

References edit

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  37. ^ "Horses Key To Making Antivenom Up For FDA Approval". Fronteras. 2011-08-02. Retrieved 2023-05-24.
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  43. ^ Calvete JJ, Arias AS, Rodríguez Y, Quesada-Bernat S, Sánchez LV, Chippaux JP, et al. (September 2016). "Preclinical evaluation of three polyspecific antivenoms against the venom of Echis ocellatus: Neutralization of toxic activities and antivenomics". Toxicon. Elsevier. 119: 280–288. doi:10.1016/j.toxicon.2016.06.022. PMID 27377229.
  44. ^ Snake Antivenom for Sub – Sharan Africa EchiTAbG (PDF), World Health Organization, 20 June 2019, retrieved 14 December 2019
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External links edit

antivenom, comics, character, anti, venom, also, known, antivenin, venom, antiserum, antivenom, immunoglobulin, specific, treatment, envenomation, composed, antibodies, used, treat, certain, venomous, bites, stings, recommended, only, there, significant, toxic. For the comics character see Anti Venom Antivenom also known as antivenin venom antiserum and antivenom immunoglobulin is a specific treatment for envenomation It is composed of antibodies and used to treat certain venomous bites and stings 1 Antivenoms are recommended only if there is significant toxicity or a high risk of toxicity 1 The specific antivenom needed depends on the species involved 1 It is given by injection 1 AntivenomMilking a snake for the production of antivenomClinical dataOther namesantivenin antiveneneAHFS Drugs comMonographRoutes ofadministrationinjectionATC codeJ06IdentifiersChemSpidernoneSide effects may be severe 1 They include serum sickness shortness of breath and allergic reactions including anaphylaxis 1 Antivenom is traditionally made by collecting venom from the relevant animal and injecting small amounts of it into a domestic animal 2 The antibodies that form are then collected from the domestic animal s blood and purified 2 Versions are available for spider bites snake bites fish stings and scorpion stings 3 Due to the high cost of producing antibody based antivenoms and their short shelf lives when not refrigerated alternative methods of production of antivenoms are being actively explored 4 One such different method of production involves production from bacteria 5 Another approach is to develop targeted drugs which unlike antibodies are usually synthetic and easier to manufacture at scale 6 Antivenom was first developed in the late 19th century and came into common use in the 1950s 2 7 It is on the World Health Organization s List of Essential Medicines 8 Contents 1 Medical uses 2 Side effects 3 Method of preparation 4 Mechanism 5 History 6 Availability 6 1 Spiders 6 2 Acarids 6 3 Insects 6 4 Scorpions 6 5 Marine animals 6 6 Snakes 7 Terminology 8 References 9 External linksMedical uses editAntivenom is used to treat certain venomous bites and stings 1 They are recommended only if there is significant toxicity or a high risk of toxicity 1 The specific antivenom needed depends on the venomous species involved 1 In the US approved antivenom including for pit viper rattlesnake copperhead and water moccasin snakebite is based on a purified product made in sheep known as CroFab 9 It was approved by the FDA in October 2000 U S coral snake antivenom is no longer manufactured and remaining stocks of in date antivenom for coral snakebite expired in fall 2009 leaving the U S without a coral snake antivenom Efforts are being made to obtain approval for a coral snake antivenom produced in Mexico which would work against U S coral snakebite but such approval remains speculative 10 11 As an alternative when conventional antivenom is not available hospitals sometimes use an intravenous version of the antiparalytic drug neostigmine to delay the effects of neurotoxic envenomation through snakebite 12 Some promising research results have also been reported for administering the drug nasally as a universal antivenom for neurotoxic snakebite treatment 13 A monovalent antivenom is specific for one toxin or species while a polyvalent one is effective against multiple toxins or species 14 The majority of antivenoms including all snake antivenoms are administered intravenously however stonefish and redback spider antivenoms are given intramuscularly The intramuscular route has been questioned in some situations as not uniformly effective 15 Antivenoms bind to and neutralize the venom halting further damage but do not reverse damage already done Thus they should be given as soon as possible after the venom has been injected but are of some benefit as long as venom is present in the body Since the advent of antivenoms some bites which were previously invariably fatal have become only rarely fatal provided that the antivenom is given soon enough citation needed Side effects editAntivenoms are purified from animal serum by several processes and may contain other serum proteins that can act as immunogens Some individuals may react to the antivenom with an immediate hypersensitivity reaction anaphylaxis or a delayed hypersensitivity serum sickness reaction and antivenom should therefore be used with caution Although rare severe hypersensitivity reactions including anaphylaxis to antivenom are possible 16 Despite this caution antivenom is typically the sole effective treatment for a life threatening condition and once the precautions for managing these reactions are in place an anaphylactoid reaction is not grounds to refuse to give antivenom if otherwise indicated Although it is a popular myth that a person allergic to horses cannot be given antivenom the side effects are manageable and antivenom should be given rapidly as the side effects can be managed 17 Method of preparation editMost antivenoms are prepared by freeze drying synonym cryodesiccation lyophilization The process involves freezing the antisera followed by application of high vacuum This causes frozen water to sublimate Sera is reduced to powder with no water content In such an environment microorganisms and enzymes cannot degrade the antivenom and it can be stored for up to 5 years at normal temperatures Liquid antivenoms may also be stored for 5 years but they must be stored at low temperatures lt 8 degrees Celsius or 46 degrees Fahrenheit 18 Mechanism editAntivenoms act by binding to and neutralizing venoms The principle of antivenom is based on that of vaccines developed by Edward Jenner however instead of inducing immunity in the person directly it is induced in a host animal and the hyperimmunized serum is transfused into the person 19 The host animals may include horses donkeys goats sheep rabbits chickens llamas and camels 20 In addition opossums are being studied for antivenom production 21 Antivenoms for medical use are often preserved as freeze dried ampoules but some are available only in liquid form and must be kept refrigerated They are not immediately inactivated by heat however so a minor gap in the cold chain is not disastrous History editThe use of serum from immunized animals as a treatment for disease was pioneered in 1890 by Emil von Behring and Shibasaburo Kitasato who first demonstrated that the infectious diseases diphtheria and tetanus could be prevented or cured using transfusions from an immune animal to a susceptible one 22 On February 10 1894 Albert Calmette at the Pasteur Institute and independently Cesaire Auguste Phisalix and Gabriel Bertrand at the National Museum of National History in France announced that they had achieved the same result treatment of a vulnerable animal with serum from an immunized one this time using snake venom as the source of protection and disease 23 Calmette went on subsequently to immunize horses using venom from Indian cobras and the resulting Serum Antivenimeux antivenomous serum became the first commercially available antivenom product 24 25 Natural immunity of snakes to their own venom was observed at least as long ago as 1767 by Felice Fontana in his work Ricerche Fisiche sopra il Veleno della Vipera Physical Research on the Venom of the Viper 26 Surgeon Major Edward Nicholson wrote in the November 1870 Madras Medical Journal that he had witnessed a Burmese snake catcher inoculating himself with cobra venom However the snake catcher was unsure whether this was actually effective and therefore continued to treat his snakes with care Nicholson along with other Britons began to consider that venom might provide its own cure Although Scottish surgeon Patrick Russell had noted in the late 18th century that snakes were not affected by their own venom 27 it was not until the late 19th century that Joseph Fayrer Lawrence Waddell and others began to consider venom based remedies again However they and other naturalists working in India did not have the funding to fully develop their theories In 1895 Sir Thomas Fraser Professor of Medicine at the University of Edinburgh picked up Fayrer and Waddell s research to produce a serum to act against cobra venom His antivenene was effective in the laboratory but failed to make an impact as the public were focused on contemporary Pasteurian discoveries 28 In 1901 Vital Brazil working at the Instituto Butantan in Sao Paulo Brazil developed the first monovalent and polyvalent antivenoms for Central and South American Crotalus and Bothrops genera 29 as well as for certain species of venomous spiders scorpions and frogs In Mexico in 1905 Daniel Vergara Lope developed an antivenom against scorpion venom by immunizing dogs 30 In Australia the Commonwealth Serum Laboratories CSL began antivenom research in the 1920s CSL has developed antivenoms for the redback spider funnel web spiders and all deadly Australian snakes 31 In the USA the H K Mulford company began producing Nearctic Crotalidae antivenin 32 in 1927 via a consortium called the Antivenin Institute of America 33 Over time a variety of improvements have been made in the specificity potency and purity of antivenom products including salting out with ammonium sulphate or caprylic acid 34 enzymatic reduction of antibodies with papain or with pepsin affinity purification and a variety of other measures 35 Many equine facilities now use plasmapheresis to collect blood plasma instead of blood serum 36 37 Availability editThere is an overall shortage of antivenom to treat snakebites Because of this shortage clinical researchers are considering whether lower doses may be as effective as higher doses in severe neurotoxic snake envenoming 38 Antivenom undergoes successive price markups after manufacturing by licencees wholesalers and hospitals 39 When weighed against profitability especially for sale in poorer regions the result is that many snake antivenoms world wide are very expensive Availability from region to region also varies 40 Internationally antivenoms must conform to the standards of pharmacopoeia and the World Health Organization WHO 20 41 Antivenoms have been developed for the venoms associated with the following animals 42 Spiders edit Antivenom Species CountryFunnel web spider antivenom Sydney funnel web spider AustraliaSoro antiaracnidico Brazilian wandering spider BrazilSoro antiloxoscelico Recluse spider BrazilSuero antiloxoscelico Chilean recluse ChileAracmyn All species of Loxosceles and Latrodectus MexicoRedback spider antivenom Redback spider AustraliaBlack widow spider Latrodectus Mactans antivenin equine origin Southern black widow spider United StatesSAIMR spider antivenom Button spider South AfricaAnti Latrodectus antivenom Black widow spider ArgentinaAcarids edit Antivenom Species CountryTick antivenom Paralysis tick AustraliaInsects edit Antivenom Species Countrysoro antilonomico Lonomia obliqua caterpillar BrazilScorpions edit Antivenom Species CountryScorpion Venom Anti Serum India Purified lyophilized enzyme refined Equine Immunoglobulins Buthus tamulus IndiaANTISCORP Premium Scorpion Venom Antiserum North Africa Purified lyophilized enzyme refined Equine Immunoglobulins Androctonus amoerexi and Leiurus quinquestraiatus IndiaINOSCORPI MENA Middle East and North Africa Androctonus australis Androctonus mauritanicus Androctonus crassicauda Buthus occitanus mardochei Buthus occitanus occitanus Leiurus quinquestriatus quinquestriatus Leiurus quinquestriatus hebreus SpainAlacramyn Centruroides limpidus C noxius C suffusus MexicoSuero Antialacran Centruroides limpidus C noxius C suffusus MexicoTunisian polyvalent antivenom All Iranian scorpions TunisiaAnti Scorpion Venom Serum I P AScVS Indian red scorpion IndiaAnti scorpionique Androctonus spp Buthus spp AlgeriaScorpion antivenom Black scorpion Buthus occitanus MoroccoSoro antiscorpionico Tityus spp BrazilSAIMR scorpion antivenin Parabuthus spp South AfricaPurified prevalent Anti Scorpion Serum equine source Leiurus spp and Androctonus scorpions EgyptMarine animals edit Antivenom Species CountryCSL box jellyfish antivenom Box jellyfish AustraliaCSL stonefish antivenom Stonefish AustraliaSnakes edit Antivenom Species CountryPANAF PREMIUM Sub Sahara Africa Purified lyophilized enzyme refined Equine Immunoglobulins 43 Echis ocellatus Echis leucogaster Echis carinatus Bitis arietans Bitis rhinoceros Bitis nasicornis Bitis gabonica Dendroaspis polylepis Dendroaspis viridis Dendroaspis angusticeps Dendroaspis jamesoni Naja nigricollis Naja melanoleuca and Naja haje IndiaSnake Venom Antiserum India Purified lyophilized enzyme refined Equine Immunoglobulins Naja naja Vipera russelii and Echis carinatus IndiaINOSERP MENA Middle East and North Africa Bitis arietans Cerastes cerastes Cerastes gasperettii Cerastes vipera Daboia deserti Daboia mauritanica Daboia palaestinae Echis carinatus sochureki Echis coloratus Echis khosatzkii Echis leucogaster Echis megalocephalus Echis omanensis Echis pyramidum Macrovipera lebetina obtusa Macrovipera lebetina transmediterranea Macrovipera lebetina turanica Montivipera bornmuelleri Montivipera raddei kurdistanica Pseuocerastes fieldi Pseudocerastes persicus Vipera latastei Naja haje Naja nubiae Naja pallida and Walterinnesia aegyptia SpainINOSERP PAN AFRICA Sub Sahara Africa Echis ocellatus Bitis arietans Dendroaspis polylepis and Naja nigricollis SpainEchiTAbG Sub Sahara Africa 44 Echis ocellatus Echis pyramidum Wales UKPolyvalent snake antivenom Anavip South American rattlesnake Crotalus durissus and fer de lance Bothrops asper Mexico Instituto Bioclon South AmericaPolyvalent snake antivenom Saw scaled viper Echis carinatus Russell s viper Daboia russelli spectacled cobra Naja naja common krait Bungarus caeruleus IndiaDeath adder antivenom Death adder AustraliaTaipan antivenom Taipan AustraliaBlack snake antivenom Pseudechis spp AustraliaTiger snake antivenom Australian copperheads tiger snakes Pseudechis spp rough scaled snake AustraliaBrown snake antivenom Brown snakes AustraliaPolyvalent snake antivenom Australian snakes as listed above AustraliaSea snake antivenom Sea snakes AustraliaVipera tab Vipera spp UKPolyvalent crotalid antivenin CroFab Crotalidae Polyvalent Immune Fab Ovine North American pit vipers all rattlesnakes copperheads and cottonmouths North AmericaSoro antibotropicocrotalico Pit vipers and rattlesnakes BrazilAntielapidico Coral snakes BrazilSAIMR polyvalent antivenom Mambas cobras Rinkhalses puff adders Unsuitable small adders B worthingtoni B atropos B caudalis B cornuta B heraldica B inornata B peringueyi B schneideri B xeropaga South Africa 45 SAIMR echis antivenom Saw scaled vipers South AfricaSAIMR Boomslang antivenom Boomslang South AfricaPanamerican serum Coral snakes Costa RicaAnticoral Coral snakes Costa RicaAnti mipartitus antivenom Coral snakes Costa RicaAnticoral monovalent Coral snakes Costa RicaAntimicrurus Coral snakes ArgentinaCoralmyn Coral snakes MexicoAnti micruricoscorales Coral snakes Colombiacrotalidae immune F ab 2 equine Anavip North American species of Crotalinae USTerminology editThe name antivenin comes from the French word venin meaning venom which in turn was derived from Latin venenum meaning poison 46 Historically the term antivenin was predominant around the world its first published use being in 1895 47 In 1981 the World Health Organization decided that the preferred terminology in the English language would be venom and antivenom rather than venin and antivenin or venen and antivenene 48 References edit a b c d e f g h i World Health Organization 2009 Stuart MC Kouimtzi M Hill SR eds WHO Model Formulary 2008 World Health Organization pp 396 397 hdl 10665 44053 ISBN 9789241547659 a b c Dart RC 2004 Medical Toxicology Lippincott Williams amp Wilkins pp 250 251 ISBN 9780781728454 Archived from the original on 2017 01 09 British national formulary BNF 69 69 ed British Medical Association 2015 p 43 ISBN 9780857111562 Knudsen C Laustsen AH April 2018 Recent Advances in Next Generation Snakebite Antivenoms Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease 3 2 42 doi 10 3390 tropicalmed3020042 PMC 6073149 PMID 30274438 Molteni M Bacteria Are Brewing Up the Next Generation of Antivenoms Wired via www wired com How to simplify the treatment of snake bites The Economist 2021 01 02 ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 2021 01 02 Gad SC 2007 Handbook of Pharmaceutical Biotechnology John Wiley amp Sons p 692 ISBN 9780470117101 Archived from the original on 2017 01 09 World Health Organization 2019 World Health Organization model list of essential medicines 21st list 2019 Geneva World Health Organization hdl 10665 325771 WHO MVP EMP IAU 2019 06 License CC BY NC SA 3 0 IGO CroFab Crotalidae Polyvalent Immune Fab Ovine SavageLabs com Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2016 02 08 Link to PDF for full prescribing information retrieved 11 11 12 Coral Snake amp Antivenom FAQ s Florida Poison Information Center Tampa May 2017 Archived from the original on 2019 11 01 Retrieved October 31 2019 North American Micrurus Coral Snake Venoms Toxnet Toxicology Data Network September 15 2015 Retrieved October 31 2019 Franklin Deborah Potential Treatment For Snakebites Leads To A Paralyzing Test Archived 2014 08 09 at the Wayback Machine NPR org July 31 2013 Universal antidote for snakebite Experimental trial represents promising step Archived 2014 07 07 at the Wayback Machine California Academy of Sciences via Science Daily May 28 2014 Whyte I 2012 Antivenom update PDF Australian Prescriber 35 5 152 155 doi 10 18773 austprescr 2012 069 Isbister GK December 2002 Failure of intramuscular antivenom in Red back spider envenoming Emergency Medicine 14 4 436 439 doi 10 1046 j 1442 2026 2002 00356 x PMID 12534488 Bhoite RR Bhoite GR Bagdure DN Bawaskar HS 2015 Anaphylaxis to scorpion antivenin and its management following envenomation by Indian red scorpion Mesobuthus tamulus Indian Journal of Critical Care Medicine 19 9 547 549 doi 10 4103 0972 5229 164807 PMC 4578200 PMID 26430342 See for example the Antivenom Precautions paragraph of the Medication section of Forster J 2006 03 14 Snake Envenomations Sea eMedicine Emergency Medicine environmental Archived from the original on 26 June 2006 Retrieved 2006 06 25 Warrell D 2016 Guidelines for the management of snakebites 2nd ed New Delhi World Health Organization p 111 136 192 ISBN 9788177394979 Gad S Handbook of Pharmaceutical Biotechnology p 692 a b Guidelines for the production control and regulation of snake antivenom immunoglobulins PDF WHO Technical Series No 1004 WHO 2017 Retrieved 15 January 2020 Opossum Compounds Isolated to Help Make Antivenom Scientific American 2015 03 30 Retrieved 2020 02 01 Ueber das Zustandekommen der Diphtherie Immunitat und der Tetanus Immunitat bei Thieren Deutsche Medizinische Wochenschrift 16 49 1113 1114 December 1890 doi 10 1055 s 0029 1207589 ISSN 0012 0472 S2CID 80469638 Bochner R 8 June 2016 Paths to the discovery of antivenom serotherapy in France Journal of Venomous Animals and Toxins Including Tropical Diseases 22 20 20 doi 10 1186 s40409 016 0074 7 PMC 4898362 PMID 27279829 Venoms venomous animals and antivenomous serum therapeutics by A Calmette translated by Ernest E Austen Wellcome Collection Retrieved 2023 05 24 Serum Antivenimeux Desseche 10cc Dried Antivenin Serum for Snake Bites Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 2023 05 24 Fontana F 1767 Ricerche fisiche sopra il veleno della vipera Wellcome Library In Lucca Nella stamperia di Jacopo Giusti Bhaumik R 2018 11 01 Colonial Encounter on Indian Snakes and their Venoms The Transmission and Transformation of Western Ophiological Knowledge in British India 1780s 1910s PDF Indian Journal of History of Science 53 4 doi 10 16943 ijhs 2018 v53i4 49536 ISSN 0019 5235 Bhaumik R 2018 11 01 Colonial Encounter on Indian Snakes and their Venoms The Transmission and Transformation of Western Ophiological Knowledge in British India 1780s 1910s PDF Indian Journal of History of Science 53 4 doi 10 16943 ijhs 2018 v53i4 49536 ISSN 0019 5235 De Franco M Kalil J July 2014 The Butantan Institute history and future perspectives PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases 8 7 e2862 doi 10 1371 journal pntd 0002862 PMC 4080994 PMID 24992341 Jean Philippe C Alfredo C Leslie B Alejandro A December 2020 Factors involved in the resilience of incidence and decrease of mortality from scorpion stings in Mexico Toxicon 188 65 75 doi 10 1016 j toxicon 2020 10 011 PMID 33065199 S2CID 223558071 CSL antivenoms 1956 Power House Museum Archived from the original on 7 August 2016 Retrieved 24 February 2017 Antivenin Nearctic Crotalidae North American Anti Snake Bite Serum Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 2023 05 24 do Amaral A 1927 Bulletin of the Antiven Institute of America Vol 1 1st ed US Antivenin Institute of America Rojas G Jimenez JM Gutierrez JM March 1994 Caprylic acid fractionation of hyperimmune horse plasma description of a simple procedure for antivenom production Toxicon 32 3 351 363 doi 10 1016 0041 0101 94 90087 6 PMID 8016856 Boyer L Degan J Ruha AM Mallie J Mangin E Alagon A December 2013 Safety of intravenous equine F ab 2 insights following clinical trials involving 1534 recipients of scorpion antivenom Toxicon 76 386 393 doi 10 1016 j toxicon 2013 07 017 PMID 23916602 Levine L Broderick EJ 1970 The plasmapheresis of hyperimmunized horses Bulletin of the World Health Organization 42 6 998 1000 hdl 10665 262354 PMC 2427561 PMID 5312259 Horses Key To Making Antivenom Up For FDA Approval Fronteras 2011 08 02 Retrieved 2023 05 24 Agarwal R Aggarwal AN Gupta D Behera D Jindal SK June 2005 Low dose of snake antivenom is as effective as high dose in patients with severe neurotoxic snake envenoming Emergency Medicine Journal 22 6 397 399 doi 10 1136 emj 2004 020727 PMC 1726801 PMID 15911942 Lewis D 11 September 2015 Why a Single Vial of Antivenom Can Cost 14 000 Smithsonian Retrieved 9 January 2017 Antivenom Supply for Snake bites www pharmaceutical technology com 24 April 2019 Theakston RD Warrell DA Griffiths E April 2003 Report of a WHO workshop on the standardization and control of antivenoms Toxicon 41 5 541 57 doi 10 1016 S0041 0101 02 00393 8 PMID 12676433 Appendix Antivenom Tables Clinical Toxicology 41 3 317 27 2003 doi 10 1081 CLT 120021117 S2CID 218867125 Calvete JJ Arias AS Rodriguez Y Quesada Bernat S Sanchez LV Chippaux JP et al September 2016 Preclinical evaluation of three polyspecific antivenoms against the venom of Echis ocellatus Neutralization of toxic activities and antivenomics Toxicon Elsevier 119 280 288 doi 10 1016 j toxicon 2016 06 022 PMID 27377229 Snake Antivenom for Sub Sharan Africa EchiTAbG PDF World Health Organization 20 June 2019 retrieved 14 December 2019 Spawls S Branch B 1995 The Dangerous Snakes of Africa Ralph Curtis Books Dubai Oriental Press p 192 ISBN 0 88359 029 8 Weinstein SA September 2015 Snake venoms A brief treatise on etymology origins of terminology and definitions Toxicon Elsevier 103 188 195 doi 10 1016 j toxicon 2015 07 005 PMID 26166305 Antivenin Merriam Webster com Dictionary World Health Organization 1981 Progress in the characterization of venoms and standardization of antivenoms Geneva WHO Offset Publications p 5 ISBN 92 4 170058 0 External links editAntivenom Index a joint project of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums and the American Association of Poison Control Centers which helps locate rare antivenoms Venom Response Program of the Miami Dade Fire Rescue service Portal nbsp Medicine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Antivenom amp oldid 1199342544, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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