On World Snake Day, call to develop effective antivenom
The Hindu
The antivenom available in India cannot counter the venom of the green pit viper behind most snakebite cases in the northeast
The green pit viper may not be more lethal than Russell’s viper, the saw-scaled viper, the spectacled cobra or the common krait. But what it injects from its poison glands often renders the polyvalent antivenom derived from the venom of the other four ineffective.
The monocled cobra, the banded krait, the lesser black krait, the great black krait, the mountain pit viper and the redneck keelback are among 15 venomous snakes out of 64 species recorded so far across the northeast. Most of the snakebite cases in the region involve different species of the green pit viper, bringing up the other venomous snakes.
The hemotoxic venom a green pit viper injects prevents the blood in the body of a bitten person from clotting, leading to internal bleeding. “Hardly any of the cases we have been fatal. But we cannot draw an inference as very little data on such snakebites are available,” Guwahati-based herpetologist Jayaditya Purkayastha said.
According to Surajit Giri, one of very doctors dealing with snakebite cases in the northeast, the antivenom derived from the ‘Big Four’ snakes are ineffective on the toxin injected by the green pit viper, or for that matter, most other venomous snakes found in the region.
The doctors referred to a 2019 study titled “Beyond the Big Four” to underline the reason. The study said venoms across these species and subspecies are extremely diverse, citing the example of the monocled cobra from West Bengal whose venom contained mostly neurotoxins while the same species from Arunachal Pradesh had cytotoxins in its venom.
Neurotoxin is a poison that acts on the nervous system. Cytotoxins kill the cells in a body.
“The antivenom we have in India is a case of one size fits all. Apart from depending on four species of snakes, experts have pointed out that about 80% of all polyvalent antivenom are derived from snakes caught in one district of Tamil Nadu,” Mr. Purkayastha said.
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