Common Blood-thinning Drug Neutralises Cobra Venom

NamStay

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A drug commonly prescribed to thin blood can be repurposed as a cheap antidote to cobra venom, a team of scientists based in Australia, Canada, Costa Rica and the UK has discovered.

Snakebites kill about 138,000 people a year, mostly in poorer rural areas in low- and middle-income countries in Africa, South and South East Asia.

More than 400,000 others develop necrosis when the tissue around the bite dies and turns black.

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Heparin carries its own set of risks.

Heparin can't be self-administered - it's generally given by IV. The article doesn't say, but I imagine it's talking about Lovenox (generic enoxaprin), which is administered via subcutaneous injection. Too much heparin too fast could cause hemorrhaging.

They're both relatively cheap, at least when compared to common antivenins. The common one in the US, administered for rattler and cottonmouth envenomations, is Crofab - it runs 6K - 10k USD per dose.
 
Although not mentioned in the article, I have often wondered what effects various snake bites had on people taking Warfarin. Many hunters traveling to Africa have had some need for anti-coagulation, as they are the age group most at risk. In the old days, that anticoagulant was rat poison. Very interesting topic.......................FWB
 

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