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Jabberwocky The jaws that bite The claws that catch

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Title: Jabberwocky The jaws that bite The claws that catch


1
JabberwockyThe jaws that biteThe claws that
catch
  • Bites
  • And the great outdoors
  • Jim Giesen, M.D.

2
JabberwockyLewis CarrollTwas brillig, and the
slithey tovesDid gyre and gimble in the
wabeAll mimsy were the borogoves,
And the mome raths outgrabe.Beware the
Jabberwock, my son!The jaws that bite, the claws
that catch!Beware the Jubjub bird,
and shun the frumious
Bandersnatch!
3
Blood Sucking Arthropodsand the Joy They Bring Us
4
Mosquitoes
  • Vector to more disease in humans than any other
    blood feeding arthropod
  • Worldwide greater than 3 million deaths per year
    from malaria alone
  • Mosquito transmitted disease will be responsible
    for the death of one out of seventeen people
    currently alive

5
Mosquito Borne Diseases
  • Eastern and Western equine encephalitis
  • St.Louis and La Crosse encephalitis
  • West Nile Virus
  • Malaria
  • Dengue
  • Bancroftian filariasis
  • Epidemic polyarthritis
  • Chikungunya fever
  • Rift Valley fever

6
Mosquito Facts
  • Only females suck blood(true Amazons)while wimpy
    males sip on nectar and plant juices
  • Consume up to their own weight in blood every 3-4
    days
  • Some species are zoophilic some anthropophilic
  • and some switch hosts seasonally providing a
    means for transmitting disease from animals to
    humans

7
Mosquito Attractants
  • Visual,thermal, and olfactory stimuli attract
    them
  • Visual stimuli important for in flight
    orientation. Thermal and olfactory more important
    as the mosquito closes in
  • Carbon dioxide and lactic acid are two well
    studied attractants
  • Carbon dioxide can draw mosquitoes from as far
    away as 100 feet
  • Volatile compounds, sweat, and fragrances from
    lotions, soaps, perfumes may be attractants
  • Men preferred over women, adults over children,
    my wife over me

8
Blackflies
  • Late Spring Early Summer scourge of the
    northwoods
  • Mouthparts tear the skin surface and produce a
    pool of blood from which the fly feeds
  • Rare systemic reactions-fever, urticaria, and
    rarely anaphylaxis
  • Intensely pruritic, painful,and slow to heal
  • Tropical species transmit Onchocerca volvulus-the
    parsitic cause of river blindness

9
Other Flies and Bugs
  • Tabanids- horseflies, deerflies have been shown
    capable of transmittting tularemia
  • Sandflies- Tiny flies associated with
    leishmaniasis
  • Tsetse flies- African trypanosomiasis(sleeping
    sickness)
  • Kissing bugs(Assassin bugs)- Vector for
    Trypanosoma cruzi the causative agent of Chagas
    disease
  • Fleas- Plague and murine typhus
  • Chigger mites-Pierce the skin with mouthparts and
    secrete a proteolytic saliva that dissolves host
    tissue creating a porridge which is then lapped
    up. Transmit scrub typhus

10
General Treatment of Insect Bites
  • Oral antihistamines
  • Ammonium solution 3.6 (After Bite) relieves
    Type1 hypersensitivity symptoms dramatically
  • Watch for secondary infection

11
Ticks
  • Most noted for high nuisance potential
  • Efficient vectors for a large number of zoonoses
  • In the US ticks outrank mosquitoes as vectors and
    tick-borne illnesses constitute an important
    infectious disease problem

12
Tick envenomation
  • Ticks cause disease by either transmitting
    microorganisms or by secreting toxins or venoms
  • Some trigger potent immune responses others have
    direct tissue toxicity
  • Clinical effects range from localized reactions
    to anaphylaxis, paralysis, and death

13
Pajaroello Tick Bites
  • Desert southwest,California, and Mexico
  • Thought to be locally necrotizing toxin resulting
    in a 2-3 cm
  • Local erythema, pain, and edema followed by
    tissue necrosis and ulceration
  • Rare severe allergic reactions

14
Tick Paralysis
  • First reported by Todd in 1912
  • Acute ascending motor paralysis appearing similar
    to Guillan Barre, botulism,or myesthenia gravis
  • 43 different species of tick have been implicated
    in the US and Australia
  • Neurotoxic venom secreted from the tick salivary
    gland causes the paralysis

15
Clinical Features
  • Paralysis develops 5-6 days after a female tick
    attaches, usually to the head or neck
  • Restlessness, irritability, and paresthesias
    followed by ascending, symmetric flaccid
    paralysis
  • Cerebellar dysfunction may occur with
    incoordination and ataxia
  • Resolution of paralysis with tick removal
    establishes the diagnosis

16
Ticks as Vectors
  • Lyme Disease
  • Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
  • Relapsing Fever
  • Colorado Tick Fever
  • Ehrlichiosis
  • Babesiosis
  • Tularemia

17
Ehrlichiosis
  • Two forms in humansHuman monocytic
    ehrlichiosis(HME) and human granulocytic
    ehrlichiosis(HGE)
  • HME is transmitted by the Lone Star Tick and is
    found in the south and east
  • HGE is found in the upper Midwest and Northeast.
    Range tends to overlap areas where Lyme disease
    is endemic
  • 70 occur in May-July
  • Broad clinical spectrum of disease from mild
    viral-like illness to life threatening
    neurological complications

18
Ehrlichiosis
  • HGE only develops rash 10 of the time
  • Caused by Ehrlichia equi like organism with
    reservoir hosts including sheep, deer, and
    rodents
  • Confirm with serologic testing after initiating
    empiric therapy with doxycycline 100 mg BID for a
    minimum of 7-10 days

19
Prevention and Prophylaxis
  • Prophylaxis not usually recommended. Even if tick
    is infected the risk of transmission is low if
    the tick is found and removed promptly
  • Proper tick removal technique is imperative
  • Proper clothing can help
  • DEET containing sprays and lotions repel ticks.
    Use formulas containing less than 10 DEET for
    children
  • Permanone is a tick repellant for use on clothing
    and its active ingredient permethrin kills ticks
    on contact. Field tests have shown permethrin to
    be 90 effective in preventing tick bites

20
Tick Pix
21
Case Report
  • 20 year old intoxicated college student presented
    to Tucsons El Dorado Hospital ER with severe
    cramping back and leg pain. He had stumbled home
    and plopped himself naked into the bath tub. He
    woke up sometime later crying out with pain. His
    friend brought the patient and a flattened black
    spider to the ER

22
The Suspect
23
Widow Spiders
  • Shiny black spider with characteristic red
    hourglass on the abdomen
  • Latrodectus spiders are worldwide in their
    distribution and in the US occur in every state
    except Alaska
  • Tend to bite defensively when accidentally crushed

24
Widow Spider Venom
  • Potent mammalian neurotoxin which causes massive
    neurotransmitter release from presynaptic endings
  • Latrodectism, the syndrome resulting from
    envenomation, is characterized by widespread
    sustained muscle contraction rather than for
    local tissue injury

25
Clinical Presentation
  • Involuntary spasm of large muscle groups of
    abdomen, limbs, and lower back can appear within
    30-60 minutes of the envenomation
  • Abdominal symptoms can mimic acute abdomen
  • Associated signs may include fasciculations,
    weakness, ptosis, priapism, fever, salivation,
    diaphoresis, and bronchorrhea
  • Symptoms may remain severe for several days. Care
    is largely supportive though an antivenin is
    available for life threatening cases
  • Special care must be taken in pregnancy(premature
    labor) in severe hypertension and in children

26
Recluse Spiders
27
Recluse Envenomation
  • Complex venom with at least 8 or 9 major protein
    bands
  • Components are both dermonecrotic and directly
    hemolytic
  • Clinical spectrum ranges from mild and transient
    skin irritation to severe local necrosis and
    dramatic hematologic and renal injury

28
Recluse Bites
29
Another Recluse Bite
30
Tarantula
31
Urticating Hairs
  • Abdominal hairs which are barbed and may contain
    an irritant venom
  • Type 1,2,3,and4 hairs cause varying degrees of
    inflammation
  • Urticating hairs of Tarantulas can be transmitted
    hand to eye and are the cause of potentially
    severe ophthalmic injury

32
Wisconsin Venomous Reptile Bites
  • A middle aged fly fisherman was working the banks
    of Black Earth Creek a couple of years ago. He
    felt a sharp pain in his lower leg. Over a period
    of several hours the pain intensified and the leg
    became red and swollen. A middle aged plastic
    surgeon with whom I shared a beer or two in
    medical school astutely noted the paired puncture
    wounds on the leg, measured the distance between
    the two punctures and arrived at the correct
    diagnosis.

33
Massasauga
34
Timber Rattlesnake
35
Field Treatment of Pit Viper Bites
  • Little science and lots of anecdotal
    recommendations
  • Weigh benefit against risk of treatment
  • Severe envenomations require antivenom and all
    due haste should be made to get the victim to a
    site for definitive care
  • Avoid mechanical suction devices
  • Avoid tourniquets even simple veno occlusive band
    as they may make local tissue necrosis worse
  • Recognize that defensive bites may be dry with
    little or no delivery of venom

36
Antivenom
  • Antivenin(Crotalidae)Polyvalent is derived from
    horse serum
  • Derived from horses immunized against two North
    American and one South American viper
  • Can be used for treatment of bites by any North
    American pit viper
  • Risk of acute reaction to antivenom itself.
    Should not be used in the field unless full
    resuscitative support is available
  • Newer sheep derived and purified antivenom,
    CroFab has been approved by the FDA for mild to
    moderate envenomations

37
Other Bites and Issues
  • Other envenomations and stings
  • Mammalian Bites Local wound issues, microbiology
    of wound infections, tetanus and rabies
    prophylaxis
  • Large animal attacks Bear, mountain lion, muskie
  • Homo horribilus- drunk on a Saturday night

38
Twas brillig and the slithey tovesDid gyre and
gimble in the wabeAll mimsy were the
borogoves,And the mome raths outgrabe.The End
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