Reports (Aug 2024)

Severe Bushmaster Snakebite Envenoming: Case Report and Overview

  • Allan Quadros Garcês-Filho,
  • Humberto H. M. Santos,
  • Thays K. P. P. Aguiar,
  • Dafnin L. S. Ramos,
  • Luis E. B. Galan,
  • Domingos S. M. Dantas,
  • Felipe A. Cerni,
  • Roberto C. Carbonell,
  • Manuela B. Pucca

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/reports7030068
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 3
p. 68

Abstract

Read online

Unlike the well-documented bothropic and crotalid snakebites in Brazil, lachetic envenomings (i.e., triggered by the bushmaster snake) are rare and present significant diagnostic challenges. This case describes a severe envenoming induced by a Lachesis muta snake in a 26-year-old Brazilian man who was bitten near a forest in November 2022. Characteristic symptoms such as sweating and bradycardia pointed towards lachetic envenoming, but initial misdiagnosis as a bothropic bite resulted in a delay in appropriate antivenom therapy. Despite later receiving the correct treatment, the severity of the envenoming necessitated the amputation of a finger and triggered a severe infection. This report highlights the challenges of diagnosing and treating Lachesis spp. bites due to their rarity. Moreover, an overview of lachetic-induced signs and symptoms was explored. This study emphasizes that further reports are warranted to improve understanding of Lachesis muta envenoming and to optimize treatment strategies.

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