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Apex Nursing

Reference — Emergency Nursing

Snakebite & Spider Bite Reference

The venoms sort themselves into two buckets — those that destroy tissue and clotting, and those that hit nerves and muscle. Match the creature to the venom type and the management follows; just don’t reach for the field remedies that make it worse.

Educational use only. Antivenom and definitive management are provider- and poison-control-directed. Identification should never delay care or risk a second bite. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Snakes

TypeVenomSignsTreatment
Pit vipers (rattlesnake, copperhead, cottonmouth)Hemotoxic/cytotoxicFang marks, severe local pain/swelling/ecchymosis, coagulopathy/bleeding, tissue necrosisAntivenom (CroFab/Anavip) for progression; supportive care
Coral snake ("red on yellow, kill a fellow")NeurotoxicMinimal local signs; DELAYED neuro effects — ptosis, dysphagia, weakness, respiratory failureObserve (effects delayed); antivenom/airway support per protocol

Snakebite — Do’s & Don’ts

Do

  • Keep the patient calm and still
  • Immobilize the limb at heart level (elevate in-hospital per protocol)
  • Remove rings/constricting items early
  • Mark the swelling edge with the time
  • Get to care; consult poison control; give antivenom as ordered

Don’t

  • Apply ice
  • Apply a tourniquet
  • Incise the wound or use suction
  • Apply electric shock
  • Waste time trying to catch/kill the snake

Spiders

TypeVenomSignsTreatment
Black widowNeurotoxic (alpha-latrotoxin)Painful muscle rigidity/cramping (abdomen mimics acute abdomen), sweating, hypertension, restlessnessPain control, muscle relaxants/benzodiazepines; antivenom for severe; supportive
Brown recluseCytotoxicInitially mild, then a painful lesion → 'red, white & blue' → possible NECROTIC ulcer; rarely systemic (hemolysis)Wound care, observation, delayed debridement; antivenom not standard

NCLEX Pearls

  • Pit viper = hemotoxic (swelling, bleeding, necrosis) → antivenom; coral snake = neurotoxic with DELAYED onset → observe + support.
  • Snakebite: immobilize at heart level (elevate in-hospital), remove rings, mark and time swelling; NO ice, tourniquet, incision, or suction.
  • Black widow = neurotoxic muscle rigidity/cramping (can mimic acute abdomen); brown recluse = cytotoxic necrotic ulcer.
  • Don't risk a second bite trying to identify the snake — describe it instead.
  • Watch a swelling bitten limb for compartment syndrome; monitor pit-viper coagulation studies.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with Emergency Nurses Association (ENA) · AHA ACLS / PALS Guidelines · Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →