Treating
a paralyzing snakebite could one day be as easy as sniffing a nasal
spray, according to a California researcher who hopes to curb
bite-related deaths that claim as many as 125,000 people worldwide each
year.
Dr. Matt Lewin, an expedition medicine
expert with the University of California, San Francisco, says he has hit
on a way to produce a cheap, portable first-aid snakebite treatment
that could change the way travelers and residents of third-world
countries respond to the venomous threat.
“Just get rid of the needles,” said
Lewin, the director of the Center for Exploration and Travel Health at
the California Academy of Sciences.
Instead of grappling with cumbersome
syringes and complicated directions, an unfortunate snakebite victim
could sniff a drug called neostigmine, which already is recommended for
use intravenously to treat paralyzing bites.
The research is in its very early
stages, but Lewin has put out a paper that describes an experiment with a
single volunteer, a 45-year-old man who agreed to be chemically
paralyzed – and then take the antidote. Twenty minutes later, the deadly
symptoms were reversed, the paper reports.
“You only need a few milligrams of the
drug to forestall the immediately life-threatening consequences of a
snakebite that causes paralysis,” said Lewin, whose study is detailed
this week in the latest issue of the journal Clinical Case Reports.
Last month, one of Lewin’s colleagues,
Dr. Stephen Samuel of Trinity College in Dublin, used the method to
treat a woman in India whose face was paralyzed by a krait, a deadly
snake in a country where an estimated 1 million people are bitten every
year.
“India is the snakebite capital of the
world,” Lewin said. Globally, as many as 5.5 million snakebites might
occur annually, according to a 2008 study.
The woman already had undergone a full
course of antivenom treatment, but it was only after receiving a
neostigmine nasal spray that her paralysis was reversed – within 30
minutes.
“Two weeks after being treated, the patient reported having returned to her daily activities,” Lewin reported.
Lewin came up with the idea for the
nasal spray after preparing for a trip to a snake-ridden part of the
Philippines and realizing that neither he nor his companions had a good
way to treat paralyzing snakebite in the wild.
More than a decade ago, Joe Slowinski, a
renowned herpetologist at the California Academy of Sciences, died
after being bitten by a banded krait while doing research in Myanmar,
where emergency medical care was not available.
Antivenoms have been the only solution
to paralyzing snakebite, but they pose several problems, Lewin said. They’re expensive, they require refrigeration and they need needles and
syringes to administer. The dosing can be tricky and some people have
bad reactions to the drugs.
“I thought, ‘There’s gotta be a better way to do this,’” said Lewin. “So I started trying to rethink the problem.”
He recalled that neostigmine is the
World Health Organization’s recommended drug for treating snakebite,
albeit in IV form. And he also remembered that the drug has been used in
nasal sprays to treat myasthenia gravis, a neuromuscular disease.
So Lewin mixed up a recipe of the nasal
spray and began planning his experiment. He agrees that it was an
unusual way to test a new drug, but Lewin insists that the required
institutional review board signed off on the plan.
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