Snakebite
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The Biophysics Of Snakebites
medicalnewstoday.com — “For years Professor Leo von Hemmen, a biophysicist at the TU Muenchen, and Professor Bruce Young, a biologist at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, have been researching the sense of hearing” View full resource at medicalnewstoday.com
Most Recently Shared on May 17, 2011 at 12:37 pm By:
The Biophysics Of Snakebites: For years Professor Leo von Hemmen, a biophysicist at the TU Muenchen, and Professor Bru.. http://dld.bz/aau7J
Treat Snakebites With Adrenaline, Study Says
health.yahoo.net — “THURSDAY, May 12 (HealthDay News) -- Giving adrenalin to people with snakebites helps prevent severe allergic reactions to antivenom treatment, new research finds.” View full resource at health.yahoo.net
Most Recently Shared on May 12, 2011 at 1:40 pm By:
Treat Snakebites With Adrenaline, Study Says http://bit.ly/jgxOzb
Snakebites a public health problem in Africa
alphagalileo.org — “Snakebites a public health problem in Africa” View full resource at alphagalileo.org
Most Recently Shared on September 9, 2011 at 3:50 pm By:
Snakebites a public health problem in Africa: One and a half million people per year are… http://t.co/6V26JR1
Snakebite Chili Recipe - Chili Recipes
healthyhomerecipes.com — “Find healthy Snakebite Chili Recipes and other healthy Chili Recipes.” View full resource at healthyhomerecipes.com
Most Recently Shared on August 20, 2010 at 8:18 am By:
Snakebite Chili Recipe : http://bit.ly/9ezinD #chili #reicpe #delicious
Snakebite: eMedicine Emergency Medicine
emedicine.medscape.com — “Overview: Medical information on snakebites, including symptoms, signs, treatment, medications, and more on Medscape from WebMD.Most snakebites are innocuous and are delivered by nonpoisonous species. North America is home to 25 species of poisonous snakes. Worldwide, only ...” View full resource at emedicine.medscape.com
Most Recently Shared on April 15, 2010 at 2:41 pm By:
Evenomation grading determines the need for antivenin in victims of pit viper envenomations. http://bit.ly/c3sbUo
Adrenaline Given Before Snakebite Antivenom Treatment Reduces Allergic Reactions
medicalnewstoday.com — “Giving low-dose adrenaline to patients who have been bitten by a poisonous snake before treatment with the appropriate antivenom is safe and reduces the risk of acute severe reactions to the treat” View full resource at medicalnewstoday.com
Most Recently Shared on May 10, 2011 at 9:05 pm By:
Adrenaline Given Before Snakebite Antivenom Treatment Reduces Allergic Reactions http://mnt.to/3VzC #allergy
Treat Snakebites With Adrenaline, Study Says - iVillage
ivillage.com — “THURSDAY, May 12 (HealthDay News) -- Giving adrenalin to people with snakebites helps prevent severe allergic reactions to antivenom treatment, new research finds. There's a high rate of acute adverse reactions to antivenom, according to the s” View full resource at ivillage.com
Most Recently Shared on May 12, 2011 at 3:08 pm By:
Treat Snakebites With Adrenaline, Study Says http://dlvr.it/RTkvb
Biophysics of snakebites: How do venomous snakes inject venom into victim's wound?
sciencedaily.com — “Most snakes do not inject venom into their victims bodies using hollow fangs, contrary to common misconceptions. The fact is that most snakes and many other venomous reptiles have no hollow fangs. Physicists have now uncovered the tricks these animals use to force their venom under the skin of their victims.” View full resource at sciencedaily.com
Most Recently Shared on May 16, 2011 at 8:52 pm By:
Biophysics of snakebites: Most poisonous snakes do not have hollow fangs, so how does the poison enter the wound... http://bit.ly/iW06dV
Snakebites a public health problem in Africa - QualityPoint Technologies
qualitypointtech.net — “One and a half million people per year are poisoned by snake venom in Sub-Saharan Africa. An IRD researcher recently analysed around 100 surveys and medical reports published over the past 40 years. No large-scale study of the situation had hitherto been conducted and public health authorities had underestimated the size of the problem. This means that currently only 10% of victims are treated, owing to a shortage of antivenoms* and lack of awareness among health care practitioners. Yet the clin” View full resource at qualitypointtech.net
Most Recently Shared on September 9, 2011 at 2:45 pm By:
Snakebites a public health problem in Africa: One and a half million people per year are poisoned by snake venom i... http://t.co/NcJu1HH
Treat Snakebites With Adrenaline, Study Says - Drugs.com MedNews
drugs.com — “Giving adrenalin to people with snakebites helps prevent severe allergic reactions to antivenom treatment, new research finds. There s a high rate of acute adve” View full resource at drugs.com
Most Recently Shared on May 12, 2011 at 2:14 pm By:
Treat Snakebites With Adrenaline, Study Says: THURSDAY, May 12 -- Giving adrenalin to people with snakebit... http://bit.ly/kFYXA1 #drug
Treat Snakebites With Adrenaline, Study Says - Drugs.com MedNews
drugs.com — “Giving adrenalin to people with snakebites helps prevent severe allergic reactions to antivenom treatment, new research finds. There s a high rate of acute adve” View full resource at drugs.com
Most Recently Shared on May 12, 2011 at 6:38 pm By:
Treat Snakebites With Adrenaline, Study Says - http://bit.ly/mHUA0t
Summertime Can Mean Snakebites | The Kid's Doctor: Your Partner in Parenting
kidsdr.com — “Did any of you read the recent newspaper article reporting the increase in snakebites in Texas this summer?” View full resource at kidsdr.com
Most Recently Shared on July 23, 2009 at 1:24 pm By:
OMG! 2 snakes on our run! Rain has pushed them into the open. How to keep your family safe. http://tinyurl.com/m6m865
Deadly Dilemma: Do Snake-Bite Kits Help? - WSJ.com
online.wsj.com — “While makers say snake-bite kits can treat a wound until help arrives, scientists say they may do more harm than good. We look at evidence and talk to experts.” View full resource at online.wsj.com
Most Recently Shared on May 13, 2009 at 1:43 pm By:
Deadly Dilemma: Do Snake-Bite Kits Help? - WSJ.com - http://tinyurl.com/qtyqzc
Adrenaline given before snakebite anti-venom treatment reduces allergic reactions
medicalxpress.com — “Giving low-dose adrenaline to patients who have been bitten by a poisonous snake before treatment with the appropriate antivenom is safe and reduces the risk of acute severe reactions to the treatment, but giving promethazine has no such effect and giving hydrocortisone may actually be harmful. These ...” View full resource at medicalxpress.com
Most Recently Shared on May 10, 2011 at 9:37 pm By:
Adrenaline given before snakebite anti-venom treatment reduces allergic reactions http://tw.medicalxpress.com/224267847
Antivenoms for Snakebite: Design, Func... [Curr Pharm Biotechnol. 2012] - PubMed - NCBI
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov — “PubMed comprises more than 21 million citations for biomedical literature from MEDLINE, life science journals, and online books. Citations may include links to full-text content from PubMed Central and publisher web sites.” View full resource at ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Most Recently Shared on February 24, 2012 at 8:38 am By:
Main controversy historically whether to use adrenaline prophylactically: ER colleagues? Snakebite antivenom http://t.co/SvIsSjW2
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