From the College of Science, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, Marilyn Goss Haskell Innovative One Health Solutions, Raleigh, North Carolina, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York, and Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia.
South Med J. 2020 Oct;113(10):514-519. doi: 10.14423/SMJ.0000000000001156.
Venomous and nonvenomous snakes are found throughout the United States. Two families of venomous snakes are indigenous to this country: the Viperidae, or pit vipers (rattlesnakes, cottonmouths, and copperheads), and the Elapidae (three species of coral snakes and a sea snake). Bites from captive nonindigenous venomous snakes such as cobras also may present at medical facilities, given the interest in exotic pet ownership in the United States. Even "dry," nonenvenomating snakebites and those from nonvenomous snakes can result in puncture wounds that require medical evaluation. This article presents updated national estimates of snakebite injuries treated in US emergency departments (EDs).
Data on nonfatal snakebite injuries were abstracted from the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System-All Injury Program (2001-2015). Variables included age, sex, body part affected, cause, disposition, and treatment month. The snake species were coded based on narrative comments. Estimates were weighted and analyzed with SAS 9.4. Data on fatal snakebites were obtained from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Wide-Ranging Online Data for Epidemiological Research (1999-2017).
From 2001-2015, an estimated 137,800 snakebite injuries were treated in US EDs (crude rate: 3.0 individuals per 100,000 population). The majority of patients were male (70.7%; crude rate 4.4/100,000 population). Arms/hands (46.8%) and legs/feet (46.1%) were the primary body parts injured. The majority of patients were treated and released (67.1%); however, nearly 30% were hospitalized or transferred to another hospital. Two-thirds of the cases involved a nonvenomous or unknown snake (67.7%). Among venomous encounters, 70.3% involved a rattlesnake. For fatal snakebites, an average of 6 deaths per year was reported (range 2-12).
Although rare, nonfatal snakebites in this study resulted in an estimated average of 9192 annual visits to EDs (roughly 1 visit per hour) and an average of 6 fatal snakebites per year. Epidemiologic data on snakebite injuries provide healthcare providers, public health officials, and veterinarians with information on populations at risk for snakebites, species of snakes likely to be encountered, and guidance for prevention efforts.
毒蛇和无毒蛇遍布美国。有两个毒蛇家族原产于这个国家:蝰科(响尾蛇、食鱼蝮和矛头蝮)和眼镜蛇科(三种珊瑚蛇和一种海蛇)。鉴于美国对异国情调宠物的兴趣,圈养的非本地毒蛇咬伤,如眼镜蛇,也可能出现在医疗机构。即使是“干”的无毒蛇咬伤和无毒蛇咬伤也会导致需要医疗评估的穿刺伤。本文介绍了美国急诊室(ED)治疗的蛇咬伤的最新国家估计数。
从国家电子伤害监测系统-所有伤害计划(2001-2015 年)中提取非致命性蛇咬伤伤害数据。变量包括年龄、性别、受伤部位、原因、处置和治疗月份。根据叙述性评论对蛇种进行编码。估计值经过加权处理,并使用 SAS 9.4 进行分析。关于致命性蛇咬伤的数据来自疾病控制和预防中心的广泛在线流行病学研究数据(1999-2017 年)。
2001-2015 年,美国急诊室治疗的蛇咬伤估计有 137800 例(粗率:每 10 万人中有 3.0 人)。大多数患者为男性(70.7%;粗率为每 10 万人中有 4.4 人)。手臂/手(46.8%)和腿/脚(46.1%)是主要受伤部位。大多数患者接受治疗并出院(67.1%);然而,近 30%的患者住院或转院到另一家医院。三分之二的病例涉及无毒或未知蛇(67.7%)。在有毒蛇咬伤中,70.3%涉及响尾蛇。致命性蛇咬伤报告平均每年死亡 6 例(范围 2-12 例)。
尽管罕见,但本研究中的非致命性蛇咬伤估计每年导致美国急诊室就诊 9192 例(平均每小时 1 例),每年平均死亡 6 例。蛇咬伤伤害的流行病学数据为医疗保健提供者、公共卫生官员和兽医提供了有关易受蛇咬伤影响的人群、可能遇到的蛇种以及预防工作指南的信息。