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A multicomponent strategy to improve the availability of antivenom for treating snakebite envenoming

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TLDR
A multicomponent strategy involving stakeholders on many levels could help consolidate sustainable improvements in antivenom availability worldwide.
Abstract
Snakebite envenoming is a common but neglected public health problem, particularly in impoverished rural regions of sub-Saharan Africa, Asia and Latin America. The only validated treatment for this condition is passive immunotherapy with safe and effective animal-derived antivenoms. However, there is a long-lasting crisis in the availability of these life-saving medications, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa and parts of Asia. We herein advocate a multicomponent strategy to substantially improve the availability of safe and effective antivenoms at the global level. This strategy is based on: (i) preparing validated collections of representative venom pools from the most medically dangerous snakes in high-risk regions of the world; (ii) strengthening the capacity of national antivenom manufacturing and quality control laboratories and their regulatory authorities and establishing new facilities in developing countries through technology transfer, as an integral part of efforts to develop their biological products industry; (iii) getting established laboratories to generate antivenoms for various regions of the world; and (iv) getting governments and relevant organizations to give snakebite envenoming due recognition within national and international public health policy frameworks. These ways of making antivenom available should be complemented by actions to improve health information systems, the accessibility of antivenoms, the training of medical and nursing staff, and community-based education. Such a multicomponent strategy involving stakeholders on many levels could help consolidate sustainable improvements in antivenom availability worldwide.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Venomics, lethality and neutralization of Naja kaouthia (monocled cobra) venoms from three different geographical regions of Southeast Asia.

TL;DR: Despite the proteomic variations, the use of Thai monovalent and polyvalent antivenoms for N. kaouthia envenomation in the three regions is appropriate as the different venoms were neutralized by the antivenom albeit at different degrees of effectiveness, supporting their uses in theThree populations.
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Strategies in ‘snake venomics’ aiming at an integrative view of compositional, functional, and immunological characteristics of venoms

TL;DR: This work offers a general overview on the evolving strategies for the proteomic analysis of snake venoms, and discusses how these may be combined through diverse experimental approaches with the goal of achieving a more comprehensive knowledge on the compositional, toxic, and immunological characteristics of venoms.
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Why do we study animal toxins

TL;DR: The mission is to find out the right natural pairings and interactions of the authors' body elements with toxins, and with endogenous toxin-like molecules, and to propose the natural pairing hypothesis, which links toxins with humans.
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Venom Proteomics of Indonesian King Cobra, Ophiophagus hannah: Integrating Top-Down and Bottom-Up Approaches

TL;DR: The integration of efficient chromatographic separation of the venom's components and locus-resolved toxin identification through top-down and bottom-up MS/MS-based species-specific database searching and de novo sequencing holds promise that the future will be bright for the field of venom research.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The global burden of snakebite: a literature analysis and modelling based on regional estimates of envenoming and deaths.

TL;DR: It is estimated that, globally, at least 421,000 envenomings and 20,000 deaths occur each year due to snakebite, with the highest burden exists in South Asia, Southeast Asia, and sub-Saharan Africa.
Journal Article

Snake-bites: appraisal of the global situation.

TL;DR: The present article is an attempt to draw the attention of health authorities to snake envenomations and urges them to prepare therapeutic protocols adapted to their needs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Snake Envenoming: A Disease of Poverty

TL;DR: This study unequivocally demonstrates that snake envenoming is a disease of the poor, and the negative association between snakebite deaths and government expenditure on health confirms that the burden of mortality is highest in those countries least able to deal with the considerable financial cost of snakebite.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Global Snake Bite Initiative: an antidote for snake bite.

TL;DR: The burden of human suffering caused by snake bite remains un-recognised, invisible, and unheard by the global public health community, forgotten by development agencies and governments alike.
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