Artigo Acesso aberto Produção Nacional Revisado por pares

A comparative study of severe scorpion envenomation in children caused by Tityus bahiensis and Tityus serrulatus

1995; UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO; Volume: 37; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1590/s0036-46651995000400008

ISSN

1678-9946

Autores

Fábio Bucaretchi, Emílio CE Baracat, Roberto José Negrão Nogueira, A. Iñigo Chaves, Flávio Ailton Duque Zambrone, Márcia Regina Campos Costa da Fonseca, Francis Solange Vieira Tourinho,

Tópico(s)

Poisoning and overdose treatments

Resumo

From January 1984 to May 1994, 17 of 239 children under 15 years old stung by Tityus serrulatus (15.1%) or Tityus bahiensis (84.9%) presented severe envenoming. Of these 17 patients (1-11 years old; median=2 yr) 14 were stung by T.serrulatus and three by T.bahiensis. All of them received scorpion antivenom i.v. at times ranging from 45 min. to 5 h after the accident (median=2h). On admission, the main clinical manifestations and laboratory and electrocardiographic changes were: vomiting (17), diaphoresis (15), tachycardia (14), prostration (10), tachypnea (8), arterial hypertension (7), arterial hypotension (5), tremors (5), hypothermia (4), hyperglycemia (17), leukocytosis (16/16), hypokalemia (13/17), increased CK-MB enzyme activity (>6% of the total CK, 11/12), hyperamylasemia (11/14), sinusal tachycardia (16/17) and a myocardial infarction-like pattern (11/17). Six patients stung by T.serrulatus had depressed left ventricular systolic function assessed by means of echocardiography. Of these, five presented pulmonary edema and four had shock. A child aged two-years old presented severe respiratory failure and died 65 h after being stung by T.serrulatus. Severe envenomations caused by T.serrulatus were 26.2 times more frequent than those caused by T.bahiensis (p<0.001).

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