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    • Cover Image - Wilderness & Environmental Medicine, Volume 34, Issue 1
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        Victims’ Response to Snakebite and Socio-epidemiological Factors of 1018 Snakebites in a Tertiary Care Hospital in Sri Lanka

          Kularatne et al.
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        Venomous Snakebite in Mountainous Terrain: Prevention and Management

          Boyd et al.
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        Effects of a negative pressure venom extraction device (Extractor) on local tissue injury after artificial rattlesnake envenomation in a porcine model

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  • Concepts

    Venomous Snakebite in Mountainous Terrain: Prevention and Management

    Wilderness & Environmental Medicine
    Vol. 18Issue 3p190–202Published in issue: September, 2007
    • Jeff J. Boyd
    • Giancelso Agazzi
    • Dario Svajda
    • Arthur J. Morgan
    • Silvia Ferrandis
    • Robert L. Norris
    Cited in Scopus: 23
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      The prevention and management of venomous snakebite in the world's mountains present unique challenges. This paper presents a series of practical, clinically sound recommendations for management of venomous snakebite in a mountain environment. The authors performed an extensive review of current literature using search engines and manual searches. They then fused the abundant knowledge of snakebite with the realities of remote first aid and mountain rescue to develop recommendations. A summary is provided of the world's most troublesome mountain snakes and the mechanisms of toxicity from their bites.
      Venomous Snakebite in Mountainous Terrain: Prevention and Management
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