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Open AccessJournal Article

Development of simple standard assay procedures for the characterization of snake venom.

R. D. G. Theakston, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1983 - 
- Vol. 61, Iss: 6, pp 949-956
TLDR
Methods have been developed for the assessment of lethal, defibrinogenating, procoagulant, haemorrhagic, and necrotizing properties of venoms, and used to study 53 venoms from 30 different species of snakes of medical importance throughout the world, which should result in the production of more potent antivenoms for use in both developing and developed countries.
Abstract
In accordance with the recommendations of the report of a WHO Coordination Meeting on Venoms and Antivenoms, methods have been developed for the assessment of lethal, defibrinogenating, procoagulant, haemorrhagic, and necrotizing properties of venoms, and used to study 53 venoms from 30 different species of snakes of medical importance throughout the world The venoms studied included Echis carinatus (Iran), Naja naja kaouthia (Thailand), Notechis scutatus (Australia), Trimeresurus flavoviridis (Japan), Vipera russelli (Thailand), and Crotalus atrox (USA), which comprise six of the eight venoms designated by WHO as international reference venoms (IRVs) (C atrox venom replaced C adamanteus venom, as an adequate supply of the latter was not available) The tests used were simple and should be reproducible in other laboratories throughout the world Procedures for assaying neuromuscular paralytic activity and systemic myotoxic activity have yet to be developedThe tests will be used to assay the neutralizing potency of both international standard antivenoms (raised using the IRVs) and new and currently available commercial antivenoms Such studies should result in the production of more potent antivenoms for use in both developing and developed countries, and improve the understanding and management of snake bite throughout the world

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Purification and characterization of the hemorrhagic factor II from the venom of the Bushmaster snake (Lachesis muta muta)

TL;DR: The hemorrhagic as well as the proteinase activity is inhibited by cysteine and by metal chelators such as EDTA, EGTA and 1,10-phenanthroline andhibitors of serine proteinases such as phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride (PMSF) and soybean trypsin inhibitor (SBTI) have no effect on the hemorrhagic factor.
Journal ArticleDOI

A turbidimetric assay for the measurement of clotting times of procoagulant venoms in plasma.

TL;DR: Plots comparing manual clotting times to the lag time in the turbidimetric assay showed good correlation between the two methods for brown snake venom, including 24 determinations in triplicate over six days for seven different venom concentrations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ability of six Latin American antivenoms to neutralize the venom of mapaná equis (Bothrops atrox) from Antioquia and Chocó (Colombia).

TL;DR: The polyvalent antivenom (INS) showed the highest neutralizing ability in terms of lethality and defibrinating activity, and all antivenoms were highly effective in the neutralization of hemorrhage.
Journal ArticleDOI

Haemostatic changes caused by the venoms of South American snakes.

TL;DR: Changes in the haemostatic mechanism caused by venoms of Bothrops, Crotalus and Lachesis snakes from Central and South America in human accidents are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A comparison of ovine and equine antivenoms

TL;DR: Antibodies raised by immunizing sheep with C. terrificus venom were more effective than their equine counterparts in preventing lethal toxicity in mice (ED50), in inhibiting the venom's pharmacological effects (haemolysis, platelet aggregation and coagulation), and in neutralizing phospholipase A2 activity.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A rapid enzymatic method for assay of fibrinogen fibrin polymerization time (FPT test).

TL;DR: The preparation of a standard curve, the reproducibility of results and arguments for expressing in clinical practice the fibrinogen content in terms of whole blood rather than plasma are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Isolation and Properties of the Thrombin-like Activity from Ancistrodon rhodostoma Venom

TL;DR: The isolation and characterization of the thrombin-like activity from the whole venom is described, finding that dogs injected with partially purified preparations of the venom would be protected from artificially induced thrombosis of the vena cava.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bites by the Saw-scaled or Carpet Viper (Echis carinatus): Trial of Two Specific Antivenoms

TL;DR: Echis carinatus is the most important cause of morbidity and mortality from snake bite in Nigeria and in many other parts of the world, and patients with systemic poisoning by this snake were given echis antivenom made either by the South African Institute for Medical Research (S.A.M.I.R.R.) or by Behringwerke (North and West African polyvalent antivenoms).
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