Results 241 to 250 of about 14,135 (283)
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Animal Bites and Stings in a University Health Service: A 10-Year Study on Cases, Treatment, and Outcomes

International Journal of TROPICAL DISEASE & Health
Introduction: Animal bites and stings constitute a significant environmental emergency worldwide. It involves an exposure to toxin from a venomous source, mainly snake bites and insect stings.    Objective: To evaluate the spectrum, clinical profile and
Imuwahen Mbarie, M. T. Abiodun
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Insect Bites and Stings

Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, 1985
This article summarizes the clinical presentation and treatment of common bites and infestations in the United States. A survey of this complex and interesting area of medicine should help the emergency physician to diagnose and treat many patients who present with "nonspecific" bites and rashes.
openaire   +2 more sources

Bites, Stings, and Envenomations

Current Trauma Reports, 2018
Provide an updated, evidence-based review on the management of snake and scorpion envenomations. In recent years, there have been several developments in envenomation management. Thromboelastography, rather than platelet count, fibrinogen, and PT, provides a more accurate and expedient method to detect coagulopathy after envenomation.
M. Williams   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Sting and bite antidote

Nursing Standard, 1988
A new spray-on antidote for stings and bites is now on the market.
openaire   +2 more sources

Bites and Stings

2012
As travel increases and humans continue to expand their presence throughout the world, dermatologists must be familiar with a number of creatures capable of inflicting medically significant injury. This chapter describes those creatures which, when encountered by the unsuspecting human, may result in notable morbidity and mortality.
openaire   +2 more sources

Arthropod Bites and Stings

2006
The mite that causes scabies, Sarcoptes scabiei, is colorless and less than 1 mm long (2,3). It perpetuates solely in human skin, forming sinuous burrows in the stratum corneum. Adult females periodically emerge from their burrows to crawl over the skin surface.
Danny B. Pence, Mitchell S. Wachtel
openaire   +2 more sources

Insect Bites and Stings

Journal of Consumer Health On the Internet, 2009
For each issue of Journal of Consumer Health on the Internet, the editor selects three to five health care sites containing high quality health care information on a given subject. The topic for each issue is very much dependent on the whim of the editor and the consumer questions that have crossed her desk.
openaire   +2 more sources

Bites and Stings

1994
More than two million people are bitten by dogs each year in the United States,1 and many others are bitten by cats, gerbils, rats, horses, raccoons, and other animals, both wild and domestic, and by other humans. Children between the ages of 5 and 9 are more likely than any other age group to receive animal bites, and boys are more likely to be bitten
openaire   +2 more sources

Insect bites and stings

Practice Nursing, 2008
The causes of bites and stings are extremely wide and varied, and for that reason it is necessary to restrict them in this article to those most likely to be encountered in primary care. Animal and human bites tend to be treated in accident and emergency departments initially, but painful, swollen and itchy skin lesions caused by insect bites and ...
openaire   +2 more sources

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