pygmy rattle snake bite
An 11-year-old victim with a good spirit after the Blue Spring State Park Pygmy Rattler attack, says MomMondayAn 11-year-old girl from Minneola bit by foot by a pigeon rat at Blue Spring State Park on Sunday is fine, her mother said on Monday. "He has been given antivenom and is in stable conditions and good spirits," said Kelly Bajek of his daughter Abigail, currently in the AdventHealth intensive care unit for children in Orlando. [READ MORE: An 11-year-old girl bit by a rattle snake at Blue Spring State Park camp] The authorities said the incident occurred at 6:23 p.m. in Campground 15 at Blue Spring State Park. Kelly Bajek said the family had been camping there since Friday. On Sunday, as the family walked until spring, the mother said her daughter was screaming. "We walked from the camp to the springs when he suddenly started screaming that he was bitten by a snake," Bajek said. He said he ran where his daughter was. "I saw the two fang marks," Bajek said. "It was bitten inside his left foot." Bajek said he quickly took a picture of the snake to take to the hospital to show medical personnel. He said that after calling 9-1 his daughter was first taken to AdventHealth Fish Memorial Orange City and then transferred to Orlando hospital. The swelling on Abigail's foot went through the ankle but his mother said he's doing well. "No, she's usually reacting to the snake bite," Bajek said when asked if her daughter will have permanent tissue damage. "But his foot is very swollen and hurt." Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that 7,000 to 8,000 people are bitten by poisonous snakes in the United States every year, but only about five die. CDC reports that more than 1,300 children are bitten by snakes every year in the USA, with 1 in 4 snake bites occurring in Florida and Texas. Florida has 44 native varieties of snakes, and only six of them are poisonous, so the vast majority of the snakes found are ninth, even if they are able to inflict a painful bite. Pygmy rattle snakes are commonly found in Volusia County and throughout the southeast. Much smaller than the eastern diamond rearguard snakes, they are blamed for most of the rattlesnake snake bites in Florida. They are easily camouflaged and often difficult to detect. If you encounter a rattle snake or another poisonous snake, the most dangerous thing you can do is try to kill her or pick her up and move her. This is how snake strikes often happen. Experts advise someone bitten by a poisonous snake to get medical attention immediately, regardless of snake type. Carl Barden, owner of the Reptile Discovery Center in DeLand and director of the placed Medtoxin Laboratories, a poison production facility, said most snake bites in Florida are from rag snakes. "They're very expensive kids," Barden said on Monday. "If you approach them, they will sometimes bite." A bite of a pygmy rattles snake will almost never be lethal, he said. "They just don't have the right amount of poison to be lethal, but it's definitely a hospital event," he said. "A child has less body mass, so it's gonna be a more serious event." When a snake injects poison, it can produce a multitude of reactions, Barden said, who has been bitten 11 times including by a monocletic cobra, a black shrimp and a diamond snake in the east. "It is certainly a trauma event for local tissue." "Snake poison is in fact a series of multiple toxins, very complex proteins and some of those components have multiple actions," he said. "In the case of a pygmy, there are a lot of things that will impact their clot capacity, with low platelet counts and cause concerns about bleeding." "The bites will swell and be very painful," he said. Here is a recession of poisonous snakes to take care of in the state. 1. Eastern diamond Rattlesnake. Average adult size: 36 to 72 inches Diamondbacks are the largest, most dangerous and most feared venomous snake in Florida. They're not in danger, but the scam habitat is a threat to them. If you encounter a 6-foot rat, be aware that you can hit from a 4-foot distance, as well as a typical shovel. This rattler has a series of brown diamonds with yellow borders on his back. Due to its size and vivid colors, it is the easiest venomosa snake to identify. 2. Dusky rattlesnake pig. Average adult size: 12 to 24 inches This small type has a painful bite that is usually not life-threatening, but still requires medical treatment. The pigmy rattler is a grey snake with a series of dark spots on the back. It is one of the most commonly seen and most likely defended snakes when threatened. 3. Canebrake or cascabel snake. Average adult: 36-60 inches They're not common in Florida. Its rank is mostly in Northeast Florida. The brown band pattern on the back has a reddish dye. 4. Cotton Water Moccasin. Average adult size: 20 to 48 inches Water moccasins live in Florida. When you feel danger, a cotton mouth will open your mouth revealing a cotton-white inside. Young moccasins can be reddish brown, but they become darker the longer they have, sometimes black. Moccasins are often confused with similar but non-venomous water snakes, especially when the water snake is hanging on a tree over the water. 5. Coral snake. Average adult: 20-30 inches This beautiful red, yellow and black snake is found all over Florida. It is often confused with the so-called harmless king-snake — many children learned the rhyme, "Red plays yellow, can kill a companion; red plays again, friend of Jack." Another way to distinguish them is that coral snakes have a black snout while king snakes have a red snout. 6. Copperhead. Average adult size: 24,36 inches In Florida, copper heads are only found in the Panhandle. They have a pain, although they generally do not threaten life, bite. They are reddish brown with forms of sand watch on the back. -... Register for e-mails daily© Gannett Co., Inc. 2021. All rights reserved. Original content available for non-commercial use under Creative Commons license, except where indicated. The Florida Times-Union ~ 1 Independent Drive, Suite 200, Jacksonville, FL 32202 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ SubSCRIBE TODAYChoose the plan that is right for you. Digital access or digital and printed delivery.
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