1. Ruthenium Antivenom Inhibits the Defibrinogenating Activity of Crotalus adamanteus Venom in Rabbits.
- Author
-
Nielsen, Vance G.
- Subjects
- *
VENOM , *ANTIVENINS , *CROTALUS , *SNAKE venom , *RUTHENIUM , *RABBITS , *BLOOD coagulation factors , *BLOOD platelets - Abstract
Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake (Crotalus adamanteus) envenomation is a medical emergency encountered in the Southeastern United States. The venom contains a snake venom thrombin-like enzyme (SVTLE) that is defibrinogenating, causing coagulopathy without effects on platelets in humans. This investigation utilized thrombelastographic methods to document this coagulopathy kinetically on the molecular level in a rabbit model of envenomation via the analyses of whole blood samples without and with platelet inhibition. Subsequently, the administration of a novel ruthenium compound containing site-directed antivenom abrogated the coagulopathic effects of envenomation in whole blood without platelet inhibition and significantly diminished loss of coagulation in platelet-inhibited samples. This investigation provides coagulation kinetic insights into the molecular interactions and results of SVTLE on fibrinogen-dependent coagulation and confirmation of the efficacy of a ruthenium antivenom. These results serve as a rationale to investigate the coagulopathic effects of other venoms with this model and assess the efficacy of this site-directed antivenom. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF