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Toxicon ; 58(8): 664-671, Oct 2, 2011.
Artigo em Inglês | SES-SP, SES SP - Instituto Butantan, SES-SP, SES SP - Acervo Instituto Butantan | ID: biblio-1068286

RESUMO

Loxosceles spiders are found globally, especially in South and North America. In Brazil, approximately 10,000 cases of Loxosceles spp. spider bites are reported annually. Herein weanalyzed 81 patients diagnosed as either cutaneous or cutaneous-hemolytic loxoscelism, in a geographical area where most accidents are caused by Loxosceles gaucho, and wereport their clinical and laboratory data obtained during week 1 and 2 after the bite. Massive hemolysis was noticed in only 2 cases, but high serum bilirubin and LDH levels, suggestive of hemolysis, were noticed in 25 cases on admission. Anemia was not frequent (14.7%), and reticulocytosis was particularly noticed during week 2 (in 56% of patients).High D-dimer levels were suggestive of endothelial cell activation and intravascular thrombin generation, but thrombocytopenia was noticed in only 17.6% of patients in week1. Acute kidney injury (AKI) only occurred in patients with massive hemolysis. The definitive diagnosis of overt disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) could not beestablished on admission. Fever was associated with the presence of hemolysis (p » 0.03). Altogether, these findings provide evidence that mild hemolysis is frequent in loxoscelism and suggest that AKI is uncommon, exclusively occurring in patients with massive hemolysis.


Assuntos
Animais , Aranhas/classificação , Hemólise , Icterícia/patologia , Necrose/complicações , Testes de Química Clínica/métodos
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