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View Full Version : Rattlesnake bite sends man to ICU



accadacca
06-30-2014, 11:55 AM
Yikes! :scared:

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SALT LAKE CITY — The Division of Wildlife Resources is giving campers and people recreating outdoors tips on how to stay safe around rattlesnakes. One Utah man knows all too well how painful being bit really is.

AJ Vande Merwe was working on a ranch with his uncle in Casper, Wyoming, when he was bitten.

“I was building fence posts with my uncle. I bent over to grab a fence post, and I got a huge sliver, I thought, but then I heard a rattle,” he said.

After he heard the rattle, he knew a snake had bitten him.

Vande Merwe said his uncle has a medical background and knew doctors in the area. His father told his uncle to take Vande Merwe to an Instacare facility, but Vande Merwe's uncle knew the bite was serious enough to require a hospital visit.

Vande Merwe's uncle put a strap around his arm to keep the venom from spreading.

“Once we got to the hospital and they took off the tourniquet, my eyes turned bloodshot red and I started to vomit about 10 seconds later,” Vande Merwe explained.

He remained in the hospital for two days, one of those days was in intensive care. His father, Joe Vande Merwe, rushed to Casper when he found out what happened.

“He was puffed up into his face and his chest and stomach. It went all over half of his body,” Joe said.

AJ received 18 doses of anti-venom and later was released from the hospital, his father said.

This month, officials with the Division of Wildlife Resources posted safety tips on their website (http://wildlife.utah.gov/wildlife-news/1438-rattlesnake-safety-tips-2014.html) regarding snakes. They tell hikers to not panic if they see a snake, and not to try to kill it.

They say most venomous snake bites happen when an untrained person tries to handle a snake.

http://www.ksl.com/index.php?sid=30524098&nid=148&title=rattlesnake-bite-sends-man-to-icu&s_cid=queue-10

tallsteve
06-30-2014, 12:36 PM
I just finished my First Aid re-certification from the Pleasant Grove Fire Department as part of my USFS trails volunteer training. In-the-field rattlesnake bite first aid has changed again recently. Basically, new protocol calls for just getting the bite victim to the closest hospital as quickly as possible. No tourniquet or constricting of arteries or vessels at all. No ice and certainly no trying to suck out the venom or cutting (way old school!). When applying a tourniquet or anything constricting, studies showed that more damage was being done by those methods than the bite itself. So, keep the victim as calm and still as possible (if you have to hike out, then hike out) and call 911 as quickly as possible.

Scott P
06-30-2014, 02:09 PM
When applying a tourniquet or anything constricting, studies showed that more damage was being done by those methods than the bite itself.

Yes. This is because a rattlesnake bite causes the constriction of blood vessels. When you apply a tourniquet you are constricting blood flow even more.

oldno7
06-30-2014, 03:40 PM
When I read this--somehow I knew it wouldn't be in Echo Canyon :twisted:

jman
06-30-2014, 06:44 PM
When I read this--somehow I knew it wouldn't be in Echo Canyon :twisted:

Lol, good one. I forgot about that

Don
07-08-2014, 08:34 AM
...Vande Merwe said his uncle has a medical background and knew doctors in the area.... Vande Merwe's uncle knew the bite was serious enough to require a hospital visit....Vande Merwe's uncle put a strap around his arm to keep the venom from spreading.


I guess the uncle isn't keeping up with the latest guidance. (Also, not supposed to give alcohol to rattlesnake bite victims; does not bode well for those of you starting your desert hikes with breakfast beer. :wink: )