For nearly 30 years, London-based reptile enthusiast and musician Steve Ludwin has been injecting snake venom—a practice that has almost killed him.
It may now help save thousands of lives, as researchers search for a new antidote based on his body's response to the toxic fluids.
"It sounds very crazy what I am doing but it turns out that it potentially has lots of health benefits," Ludwin, the tattooed 51-year-old told AFP in the living room of his home in the British capital.
Ludwin demonstrated his decades-old habit by firmly holding the head of a green Pope's tree viper—Trimeresurus popeiorum—and extracting a few drops of its venom.
Minutes later, he has injected the fluid into his arm using a syringe.
The scientists hope to produce cheaper anti-venom from the antibodies in his blood.
[Please note that this is very dangerous and Mr. Ludwin has almost died a number of times. Don't try this at home! - Ed]
(Score: 4, Informative) by martyb on Sunday November 12 2017, @02:41AM (2 children)
That line of thinking could get someone killed.
My skin split open near the end of one of my fingers due to dryness. I disinfected it with an alcohol wipe and applied a bandage. Repeated the cleaning and bandage-changing for a couple days. Continued to get worse as it started oozing. Soaked it with hydrogen peroxide and applied anti-bacterial ointment. Repeated several times a day. Continued to deteriorate.
Had the wound looked at by a doctor. Was put on strong, oral antibiotics. Same night, my arm swelled in size and became red and inflamed from the fingertip nearly to my shoulder. Saw the doctor first thing the next morning. Said I had to go to the emergency room and get an IV. Thought it was going to be just a pump me up and send me home kind of thing. Nope. "Oh no no no; you're staying here for a while."
They put me on last-line-of-defense IV antibiotics. Regular dosing around the clock. I was in the hospital for 3 days undergoing this regimen... when the infection started spreading even further. They cranked up the dosage and duration of the IVs. Finally, after 6 days in the hospital, I was released and able to go home.
Had I waited one more day, I would have died. From an infection forming in a wound that was less than 1/4 inch deep.
If your wound seeps puss and/or forms a reddened area around the wound, you owe it to yourself to have it seen by a medical professional... promptly!
tl;dr infections are for real and should not be taken lightly. They can happen even in the USA and it does not require "Punji sticks or inner-city knife wounds".
Wit is intellect, dancing.
(Score: 2, Touché) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 12 2017, @10:39AM (1 child)
> If your wound seeps puss and/or forms a reddened area around the wound, you owe it to yourself to have it seen by a medical professional... promptly!
Unless you don't have health insurance, in which case walk it off like a champ and feel the warm glow of satisfaction that you're saving a rich person money.
(Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 13 2017, @02:06PM
Maybe you didn't read the above story - but you really can't NOT see a doctor for that type of wound. Figure out payment later - you are IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR ARM AND LIFE.