Emergency & clinical flowcharts
Signs and symptoms1 |
First aid | Emergency medical treatment | Possible cause | Antivenom2 | ||||
Local signs of a sting (see below) plus nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, diarrhoea, urticaria, angio-oedema, bronchospasm, arterial hypotension (see Diagnosis & Treatment: First aid / lay people) |
Treatment of immediate-type allergic reactions, including anaphylactic shock |
All cnidarians |
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Unberable local pain; skin lesions with typical ladder-like "cross-hatching pattern" (see Fig. 4.11); cardiac dysfunction (arrhythmias, arterial hypotension), respiratory insufficiency; cardiopulmonary failure within minutes possible (see Chironex fleckeri) |
Vinegar (4–6% acetic acid3), see Diagnosis & Treatment: First aid / lay people |
Oxygen; commence or continue reanimation; pain: pethidine 1–2 mg/kg body weight, repeat as needed; respiratory insufficiency: endotracheal intubation and artificial respiration (see Diagnosis & Treatment: Hospital |
Chironex fleckeri Chiropsalmus quadrigatus |
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Pain; linear urticarial or papular skin lesions (see Fig. 4.11); cardiac dysfunction (arrhythmias, arterial hypotension), respiratory insufficiency; cardiopulmonary failure within minutes possible (see Physalia physalis); haemolysis |
Physalia sp. |
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Pain, may be minimal; local erythema, may be minimal (see Fig. 4.11); "Irukandji syndrome" (can occur after a delay of up to several hours): cramping abdominal pain, back pain, limb pain, vomiting, state of anxiety, cardiac arrhythmias, arterial hypertension, pulmonary oedema, heart failure (see Carukia barnesi) |
Vinegar (4–6% acetic acid3), see Diagnosis & Treatment: First aid / lay people | Oxygen; pain: pethidine; anxiety: diazepam; arterial hypertension: phentolamine 5 mg initially |
Carukia barnesi and various other species |
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Extremities: acute regional vascular insufficiency distal to the sting (see Diagnosis & Treatment: Hospital) |
see Diagnosis & Treatment: Hospital | Various cnidarians (see Diagnosis & Treatment: Hospital) |
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Extremities: mononeuritis multiplex distal to the sting (see Diagnosis & Treatment: Hospital) |
see Diagnosis & Treatment: Hospital | Various cnidarians (see Diagnosis & Treatment: Hospital) |
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Eyes: pain, conjunctivitis, corneal oedema, iridocyclitis (see Diagnosis & Treatment: Hospital) | |
see Diagnosis & Treatment: Hospital | Various cnidarians (see Diagnosis & Treatment: Hospital) |
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Local in the region of the sting: acute (within minutes), painful linear or blotchy urticarial or papulovesicular skin lesions, erythema, (necrosis, ulceration) |
Treatment of pain: ice packs (see Diagnosis & Treatment: First aid / lay people); Chironex fleckeri/Chiropsalmus quadrigatus, Physalia sp., Carukia barnesi, see above |
All cnidarians |
1 |
See also the Clinical flowchart as a guide to the dynamics of envenoming. |
2 | See "Essentials of the management of envenoming and poisoning: 9. How is the appropriate antivenom chosen? When is it administered?". If clinical information regarding the efficacy of an antivenom is available, it is presented in the relevant Biomedical database entry. |
3 | E.g. household vinegar. |