Hymenoptera stings: Difference between revisions

No edit summary
Line 28: Line 28:
*EpiPen
*EpiPen


==CME==
==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

  1. Bees
  2. Wasps
  3. 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

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?

the size of the bee
the size of the bee’s stinger
the nature of the most severe previous reaction experienced by the patient
the amount of cutaneous erythema
whether the patient is on oral steroid treatment