Heat Cramps First Aid
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About 3,000 species of snakes are known, of which 15% are lethal. These species are dangerous because of their potential to inject venom into the person they bite. According to the World Health Organization, 4.5 to 5.4 million people per year get snakebites, of which 40 to 50 percent become critical. These deaths and complications are avoidable if one can provide the victims with appropriate first aid for a snakebite.
A snakebite has many signs and symptoms—from local tissue damage to the person’s death. The bite usually appears as two punctures in the skin inflicted by the predator’s fangs. Most initial symptoms include bleeding, nausea, feebleness, fatigue, and faintness. However, these symptoms worsen if the bitten person is left unattended and deprived of first aid.
Local Effects: Usually, the area where a snake bite occurs swells up. Other indications are local pain, inflammation, redness, and cyanosis (the area turns blue, indicating insufficient blood supply). Cyanosis indicates the death of local tissue. Blister formation in the area of snakebite is also prevalent. If first aid for a snakebite is not provided and the wound is left untreated, it can lead to the death of whole limbs and amputation.
Bleeding: Some species of snakes result in the rupture of blood vessels, and it causes hemorrhage (internal bleeding). This condition is boosted as venom adds anticoagulants to the prey’s blood, resulting in various conditions like shock (organ death due to insufficient blood supply), edema (accumulation of fluid in interstitial spaces), or death.
Muscle Degeneration: Snakebites have enzymes that attack proteins that contribute to the muscle’s basic structure, resulting in muscle breakdown and decreased mass. It leads to muscular atrophy (destruction).
Neurological and cardiac compromises: Venom from certain species directly affects the nervous system by destroying the nerve cells, leading to loss of reflexes. They may cause breathing problems and paralysis. Similarly, they cause myocardial infarction, arrhythmias, and many other cardiovascular diseases of severe nature. Initial and mild symptoms include blurriness of vision, hyperventilation, tachycardia or bradycardia, slurred speech, high blood pressure, arrhythmia, numbness, and loss of sensations. These mild symptoms, if left unattended, worsen the situation.
First aid is the emergency medical care provided before the treatment. The first aid of snakebites slows down the spread of injected venom. Anyone can provide first aid; victims can give it to themselves or ask someone nearby to do that. As per W H O, it includes:
Immobilization :
Every year, many people get bitten by a snake. Depending upon the species, the snakes are poisonous, and even nonpoisonous snakes carry harmful bacteria. In such situations, lives can be saved if one knows how to perform first aid for snakebites.
Suction for venomous snakebite: a study of “mock venom” extraction in a human model
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