USU students learn to care for and prevent snake bite injuries
By Christopher Austin
Troops face a heightened risk of snake bites when deployed
and USU students must be prepared to care for these injuries. Bruce Shwedick,
of the Reptile Discovery Programs, presented an assortment of venomous and
non-venomous snakes to faculty, students, and their families, and discussed how
to prevent and care for snake bites.
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A cobra responds to Shwedicks movement around the table (Image Credit: Tom Balfour) |
For over thirty years, Shwedick, as part of the Snakes
Alive! program, has been giving presentations on snakes – particularly venomous
ones – as part of the Department of Preventative Medicine’s Tropical Medicine
course. The Tropical Medicine course teaches service members how to manage
disease in limited-resource settings, which includes managing snake bites.
“I was deployed in Afghanistan and saw kraits and cobras
like the kind he showed, and we were aware of the saw-scaled viper,” said Army
Maj. Richard Eide, a Masters of Public Health student who is taking the Tropical
Medicine Course and was in the audience for the presentation. “We had a lot of
concerns about those snakes.”
Presenting live specimens to the audience, Shwedick focused
on what details help distinguish snake species from one another – even if snakes
might be similar in appearance, the treatment for their bites can be very
different.
With the development of DNA analysis technology, scientists
have been able to distinguish 400 different species from similar looking snakes
previously thought to be a part of an existing species. Even back when Shwedick
was in school “it was known that if anti-venom was produced in India for the
common cobra, it was completely ineffective against the venom of the common
cobra in the Philippines. But they were still thought to be the same species of
snake.”
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Shwedick holds a milk snake in his hand while a rubber
toy of its dangerous cousin, the coral snake lies on the table. (Photo by Tom Balfour) |
For medical students, this information is critical:
treatment for venomous snake bites is reliant on knowing which species of snake
it is, and where the anti-venom is available. Knowing the species can
be
tricky, especially considering that entirely different species can be
differentiated only by tiny details like the shape of eyes or heads, or the
number of rows of teeth a creature has.
“Red touches yellow, you’re a dead fellow. Red touches
black, you’re okay Jack,” is the saying to help differentiate between the very
similar poisonous coral snake and its non-poisonous relative, the milk snake. Both
species share a red, black and yellow color scheme, but the pattern of these
colors on the body is the best way to tell the difference between a venomous
snake and a non-venomous one – at least without getting up close and personal.
“The most recommended tools for a venomous snake bite in
North America, if you’re hiking in remote areas or out training: a cell phone
and a sharpie. If you lose service in a remote area, keep a mental picture of
the last place you had cell phone service,” Shwedick said. “Because if you’re
bitten, you don’t want to wait on the chance that someone is going to come
along, even though generally if someone is bitten by a venomous snake its best
to keep them still and not have them move around. The venom travels through the
lymphatic system, so the more movement, the greater spreading. But if you’re in
a remote area, you need help and you need to walk and get back to where you
have cell reception. If you’re bitten, use your sharpie to report the location
of the bite and the time you were bitten. Take a photo of the snake.”
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Shwedick wrapped up the session by inviting the audience to pet Banana Girl, an albino python (Image Credit: Kelsey Gilbert) |
USU students, however, likely won’t have the luxury of a
smart phone to save the day when deployed, which is why the Tropical Medicine
course is an important part of the medicine curriculum. Students don’t know
exactly where they’ll be stationed upon graduation and must be prepared for
anything. The Snakes Alive presentation is just one more way USU is preparing
students for a different kind of medical career.