- Joined
- Apr 23, 2004
- Messages
- 2,103
"Symptom in search of a toxin: muscle spasms following bites by Old World tarantula spiders (Lampropelma nigerrimum, Pterinochilus murinus, Poecilotheria regalis) with review"
http://qjmed.oxfordjournals.org/content/102/12/851
I had posted this in the FB group but since that's mainly a photo-sharing group it received a whopping 3-4 likes and no real discussion. The case reports are well-written. @viper69, you might find them a bit more informational when they discuss blood tests due to your bg.
Just a short excerpt from Case 1, he had already been dealing with symptoms for the first two days, do read the article in its entirety though.
http://qjmed.oxfordjournals.org/content/102/12/851
I had posted this in the FB group but since that's mainly a photo-sharing group it received a whopping 3-4 likes and no real discussion. The case reports are well-written. @viper69, you might find them a bit more informational when they discuss blood tests due to your bg.
Just a short excerpt from Case 1, he had already been dealing with symptoms for the first two days, do read the article in its entirety though.
"Conclusions: Bites by several genera of African, Asian and Australasian tarantulas can cause systemic neurotoxic envenoming. In the absence of available antivenom, severe persistent muscle spasms, reminiscent of latrodectism, pose a serious therapeutic challenge. Discovery of the toxin responsible would be of scientific and potential clinical benefit. Tarantula keepers should be warned of the danger of handling these animals incautiously."Forty-eight hours after the bite, he finally presented to hospital in desperation. Two faint puncture wounds 8 mm apart with surrounding erythema were visible on the radial aspect of the bitten finger which was swollen together with the whole of the left hand, restricting interphalangeal joint movements. The patient's skin was clammy to touch and he had a tachycardia of 125 beats per minute but a normal blood pressure. The muscle spasms were so severe that it proved impossible to give him an intramuscular injection of tetanus toxoid. He was admitted for observation, but trismus and generalized spasms continued to increase until ∼4 days after the bite, after which they declined and had disappeared completely 7 days after the bite. There was no fever, chest pain or respiratory symptoms. Routine blood tests, including differential white blood count, were within normal limits, but the serum creatine kinase was 1062 iu/l (normal <195 iu/l), later falling to normal by the time he was discharged. Plasma electrolyte concentrations, including Na+ and Ca2+ were normal. The total Ca2+ concentration corrected for serum albumin was initially 2.28 mmol/l (normal 2.25–2.6 mmol/l) and subsequently ranged from 2.39 to 2.44 over the next 3 days. The admission electrocardiogram (ECG) confirmed a sinus tachycardia with a ventricular rate of 114 beats per minute. Subsequent traces showed no atrial or ventricular tachyarrhythmias. Serial troponin-I cardiac enzyme levels were not elevated. Oral diazepam and six hourly intravenous calcium gluconate injections were given in an attempt to relieve the spasms but the patient was not convinced that these treatments helped at all.
Last edited: