Hymenoptera stings: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
Ostermayer (talk | contribs) (→CME) |
||
| Line 28: | Line 28: | ||
*EpiPen | *EpiPen | ||
== | ==Review Questions== | ||
<quiz display=simple> | <quiz display=simple> | ||
{You are seeing a patient who has been stung by a bee. The risk of his developing anaphylaxis depends most upon which of the following? | {You are seeing a patient who has been stung by a bee. The risk of his developing anaphylaxis depends most upon which of the following? | ||
Revision as of 14:45, 3 April 2014
Class Hymenoptera
- Bees
- Wasps
- Fire Ants
- most reactions are local but anaphylaxis and serum sickness are possible
Bees
- Barbed Stingers - remain in victims
- Process kills the bee
- Killer bees have small individual toxin potency but attack in large numbers
- Venom contains histamine, bradykinin
- redness and irritation last 1-3 days
Wasps
- Non barbed stinger - can sting multiple times
- Histamine and bradykinin similar to bees
- redness and irritation last 1-3 days
Fire Ants
- alkaloid venom
- Intense burning papules that may turn to pustules in 24hrs
Treatment
- Local wound care and tetanus prophylaxis
- Remove stingers to reduce venom exposure
- Oral antihistamine
- EpiPen
Review Questions
