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Marine Trauma and Envenomations

Marine Trauma and Envenomations. Andrew Butterfass, MD FACEP Cabrini Medical Center. Key Points. Identify Hazardous Marine Life. Manage minor exposures. Identify and stabilize major envenomations. Introduction. Marine life injuries are extremely diverse.

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Marine Trauma and Envenomations

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  1. Marine Trauma and Envenomations Andrew Butterfass, MD FACEP Cabrini Medical Center

  2. Key Points • Identify Hazardous Marine Life. • Manage minor exposures. • Identify and stabilize major envenomations.

  3. Introduction • Marine life injuries are extremely diverse. • Many organisms are endemic to one region. • Most injuries occurs in populated costal waters or freshwater inland area’s. • High profile injuries include shark and alligator attacks. • Reality about 100 attacks a year worldwide with only about 5-10 deaths.

  4. Introduction • Traumatic Encounter • Bite or puncture with fin, spine, scale. • Examples- Shark, barracuda, alligators, moray eels, and sea urchins. • Cause direct and indirect injury by force and secondary infection.

  5. Introduction • Envenomation- toxin involved • Can cause hypersensitivity reactions, anaphylaxis and specific toxic venom reactions. • Puncture • Examples include Cone shells, Octopus, and Sea snakes. • Contact • Usually caused by invertebrates including coelenterates (jellyfish), sponges and bristle worms..

  6. Coelenterates • Only 12 out of 500 species of jelly fish are venomous. • Reaction is dose and individual dependant. • Most Coelenterates cause local reaction. • Box Jelly Fish and Man-of-War are exceptions.

  7. Chinonex Fleckeri- Box Jellyfish

  8. Box Jellyfish

  9. Box Jellyfish Victim

  10. Box Jellyfish and Man-of-War • Box Jellyfish may be most potent marine envenomations. • Stings can be severe enough to cause loss of consciousness. • Sting can cause muscle cramps, abdominal pain, fever, chills, nausea, vomiting, respiratory distress, delirium, paralysis and death. • Most causes of death are from drowning secondary to panic or cardiovascular collapse.

  11. Man-of-War

  12. Nematocyst • Nematocyst- Stinging Cell activated by direct contact, changes in temperature and osmolality. • Initial response is pain or prickling. • Red hot and swollen rash with pustule and vesicle formation. • Venom is complex • Nerve conduction affects due to tetramine which is similar to curare. • Pain and local histamine effects are due to 5-hydroxytryptamine.

  13. Nematocyst

  14. Coelenterate Sting Treatment • Initial treatment includes washing area with salt water. (fresh water will destabilize nematocysts.) • Denature the neomocyts with 5% acetic acid (vinegar) for 30 min. • Remove nematocyst with forceps. • Howell suggests using shaving cream and shaving affected area.

  15. Coelenterate Sting Treatment • Apply topical analgesics and steroids. • For extreme hypersensitivity and systemic reactions • ABC’s • IV analgesics and steroids if needed. • Cardiovascular monitoring and support as needed.

  16. Seabather’s Eruption • Jelly Fish Larvae- Linuche unguiculata • Contact Dermatitis • Occurs in eastern coast of Florida between March and August. • Puritic, erythematous, papules that appear in distribution of bathing suit. • Present within 24 hours of exposure, but may be delayed 3 to 4 days. • Treatment includes systemic and topical steroids and antihistamines.

  17. Seabather’s Eruption

  18. Seabather’s Eruption

  19. Sponges • Of 5000 known species, 12 are toxic. • Three produce contact dermatitis • Red-beard sponge Micronia prolifera. • Fire sponge Tedania ignis. • Poison-bun sponge Fibulila sp. • Treatment similar for jellyfish. • Small needle like spicules can be removed with piece of tape.

  20. Red-beard Sponge

  21. Fire Sponge

  22. Venomous Fish • 200 known species of venomous fish • Most Common • STINGRAY • LIONFISH/SCORPIONFISH • STONEFISH • SALTWATER CATFISH • WEEVERFISH

  23. Stingray • Cause tissue damage with sharp tail. • Tail has one to four sharp spines on dorsal surface. • Spines have membrane that tears to release venom. • Most injuries occur when ray is stepped on. • Spines are fired into foot or leg.

  24. Stingray

  25. Stingray Venom • Venom is Thermolabile. • Symptoms include blue discoloration at wound site secondary to vasoconstriction. • Intense pain at site, local ischemia and edema. • Systemic effects include -Salivation, sweating, vomiting, diarrhea, cramps, hypotension, and cardiovascular collapse.

  26. Stingray EnvenomationTreatment • Keep person quiet- activity circulates venom. • Place constricting band above wound if on a limb (not tourniquet) • Venom is Thermolabile- Soak wound in hot water (110-113 degree F) for 30-60 minutes or until pain subsides. Heat denatures venom proteins. • Irrigate and remove any remaining spine. • Wound care including antibiotic coverage and tetanus prophylaxis. • Pain relief

  27. Lionfish/ScorpionfishStonefish • Lionfish/Scorpionfish found in tropical seas including Red sea, Indian ocean and Pacific ocean. • Stonefish found in waters of Australian coast.

  28. Lionfish

  29. Stonefish

  30. Lionfish and Stonefish Treatment • Venom is similar to stingray. • Antivenin is available through the Australia Commonwealth serum lab. • Symptoms include immediate intense pain, erythema, cyanosis, edema, nausea, vomiting, hypotension, delirium and cardiovascular collapse. • Irrigate, debride and soak wound in hot water 30-60 minutes to denature venom. • Analgesia and wound care.

  31. Saltwater Catfish • Found in the warm tropical of Indo-pacific. • Fins contain complex venom • Symptoms include Intense pain. Systemic response is rare, but may include muscle cramps, tremor, fatigue, syncope, and cardiovascular collapse. • Venom is thermolabile. • Wound care including broad-spectrum antibiotics (Vibrio species).

  32. Saltwater Catfish

  33. Weeverfish • Found in English channel. • Venom is on dorsal fin. • Venom is thermolabile. • Similar treatment to other fish.

  34. Weeverfish

  35. Sea Snakes • Found in warm tropical waters in the Indo-pacific and off the coast of Australia. • Air breathing and usually not aggressive. • Venom is extremely toxic. (more than cobra venom.) • Most sea snake bites can not penetrate a 1/8 inch wetsuit and do not envenomate with every bite.

  36. Sea Snakes • Venom is a heat-stable nonenzymatic protein. • Venom blocks acetylcholine. • Asymptomatic latent period of 10 minutes to 6-8 hours. • Symptom’s include malaise, anxiety, and stiffness. • Late symptom’s include aching, paralysis, trismus, ptosis, hepatic, renal, and respiratory instability. • Cardiovascular collapse and death. • 10% of untreated cases are fatal.

  37. Sea Snakes

  38. Sea Snakes

  39. Sea Snake’sTreatment • Immobilize site, soaking in hot water not effective. • ABC’s, may require hemodialysis and respiratory support. • Hospitalize and administer antivenin. • Polyvalent sea snake antivenin from Australia Commonwealth serum lab. • Use polyvalent land snake antivenin if sea snake antivenin is unavailable.

  40. Cottonmouth • Also know as Water Moccasin. • Snake found in fresh water area’s. • North American cottonmouth found in southern states as far north as Virginia and as west as Texas. • Aggressive, territorial snake with lightning-fast, bacteria-rich hemotoxic bite. • Symptoms include nausea, vomiting, hypotension, DIC, hemolysis, seizures and respiratory paralysis

  41. Cottonmouth

  42. Cottonmouth

  43. Cottonmouth

  44. Cottonmouth

  45. Cottonmouth Treatment • Remove jewelry and tight fitting clothing around wound. • Clean (Betadine), immobilize, pressure dressing. • Administer antivenin (horse serum, test for hypersensitivity,). • IV sedation, analgesics and antibiotics. • Do not use ice, tourniquets, incision and oral suction.

  46. Blue-Ringed Octopus • Found in costal waters of New Zealand and Australia. • Painless bite followed by abnormal sensation in mouth, neck and head. • Nausea, vomiting, dyspnea, and apnea. • May also have visual disturbances, impaired speech and swallowing, weakness and paralysis.

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