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Stingray Wounds: Effective Management and Potential Complications

What is the epidemiology of stingray injuries? How are stingray stings managed? What are the potential complications of stingray envenomations? How can an interprofessional team enhance the care of stingray injury patients?

Epidemiology of Stingray Injuries

Stingrays are very common throughout tropical marine waters and freshwaters, with over 150 species worldwide. They range in size from inches to 6.5 feet and can weigh up to 800 pounds. Stingray injuries are frequent, especially in areas where they feed near coral reefs. In the United States, there are approximately 750 to 2000 stingray injuries reported annually, while in tropical regions with freshwater stingrays, the estimated number of cases per year can reach into the thousands. Stingray victims are predominantly male, with an average age of 28 years, and the most common sites of injury are the lower and upper extremities.

Management of Stingray Envenomations

The management of stingray stings involves several key steps. First, any retained barbs or spines must be removed from the wound. Next, the wound should be thoroughly cleaned and irrigated. Immersion of the affected area in hot water (as hot as can be tolerated) for 30 to 90 minutes helps to inactivate the heat-labile venom. Analgesics and antibiotics may be prescribed as needed to manage pain and prevent infection. In severe cases, antivenom or other medical interventions may be required to address complications such as cardiac toxicity or neurological symptoms.

Potential Complications of Stingray Envenomations

While most stingray injuries have low morbidity, there are a number of potential complications that can arise. The venom of stingrays is known to be cardiotoxic, and in rare cases, can lead to cardiac complications or even fatality. Neurological symptoms such as headaches, vertigo, and muscle cramps may also occur. Serious injuries, such as arterial or spinal cord damage, can result from the mechanical trauma of the barb piercing the skin. In some cases, the sheath of the barb may remain embedded in the patient’s skin, requiring debridement for removal.

Role of the Interprofessional Team

The care of patients with stingray injuries requires an interprofessional approach. Emergency medical personnel, such as paramedics and emergency department staff, play a crucial role in the initial management, including wound care, pain control, and transport to a healthcare facility. Physicians, including emergency medicine, family medicine, and wound care specialists, are responsible for further evaluation, treatment, and management of any complications. Nurses and other healthcare providers, such as physical therapists, can assist in the ongoing care and rehabilitation of patients. Effective communication and collaboration among the interprofessional team is essential to enhance the care of stingray injury patients and improve outcomes.

Risk Factors for Stingray Envenomation

What are the key risk factors for stingray envenomation? Stingrays are known to be common in tropical marine and freshwater environments, especially near coral reefs where they often feed. Individuals who swim, wade, or walk in these areas are at an increased risk of encountering and being stung by a stingray. Additionally, the majority of stingray injuries occur in men, with the lower and upper extremities being the most common sites of injury.

Complications of Stingray Envenomation

What are the potential complications of stingray envenomation? While most stingray injuries have low morbidity, there are several serious complications that can occur. These include cardiac toxicity from the venom, leading to cardiac complications or even fatality in rare cases. Neurological symptoms such as headaches, vertigo, and muscle cramps may also arise. Mechanical trauma from the barb can result in arterial or spinal cord damage, and the sheath of the barb may remain embedded in the patient’s skin, requiring debridement for removal.

Importance of Interprofessional Collaboration

Why is interprofessional collaboration important in the care of stingray injury patients? The management of stingray injuries requires the expertise and coordination of various healthcare providers. Emergency medical personnel are crucial in the initial care, while physicians, nurses, and other specialists are responsible for ongoing evaluation, treatment, and rehabilitation. Effective communication and collaboration among the interprofessional team ensures that patients receive comprehensive and evidence-based care, which can ultimately improve outcomes and minimize the risk of complications.

Stingray Sting – StatPearls – NCBI Bookshelf

Aubri Charnigo; Geoffrey Thiele; Erwin L. Kong; Rebecca J. Ondrus.

Author Information and Affiliations

Last Update: July 19, 2022.

Continuing Education Activity

Stingray envenomations are common injuries. Practitioners should recognize that these injuries vary in level of severity, and clinical concerns should vary accordingly. The type of stingray involved and the anatomical region of injury affect the associated morbidity and, in some cases, mortality. Short-term management includes the removal of any retained barbs, wound care, and immersion of the injury in hot water to inactivate the toxin. This activity outlines the evaluation and treatment of stingray stings and reviews the role of the interprofessional team in the care of patients with this condition.

Objectives:

  • Review the risk factors for stingray envenomation.

  • Outline the management of stingray envenomation.

  • Describe the complications of stingray envenomation.

  • Summarize the importance of collaboration among interprofessional team members to enhance the care of stingray injuries and improve outcomes for affected patients.

Access free multiple choice questions on this topic.

Introduction

Stingrays are a subset of the cartilaginous fish commonly known as rays. Rays are members of the Chondrichthyes class, which also includes sharks and skates. All rays share a flat body with enlarged pectoral fins that permanently fuse to their heads. The mouth of a stingray is on the ventral side of the animal. The most dangerous aspect of the stingray is the tail due to the spinal blade, also known as its stinger or barb. Rays with longer spines located more distally on their tail represent the greatest danger for sting injuries.[1]

Etiology

Stingrays can have between one and three spinal blades. The stinger is covered with rows of sharp spines made of vasodentin, a cartilaginous material that can easily cut through the skin. The stingray is unique from other venomous animals in that the venom storage is not in a gland. The venom is stored inside its own secretory cells within the grooves on the undersides of the spine. Freshwater stingrays have more secretory cells that cover a larger area along the blade. Because of this fact, freshwater stingrays have a venom that is more toxic than that of their saltwater relatives. The venom of the stingray has been relatively unstudied but is known to be heat-labile and cardiotoxic.[1][2]

Epidemiology

Stingrays are very common throughout tropical marine waters and freshwaters. There are over 150 species of stingray worldwide, ranging in size from inches to 6.5 feet and in the larger species weighing as much as 800 pounds. Stingrays often feed in or near coral reefs, causing frequent human injuries. In the United States, there are approximately 750 to 2000 stingray injuries reported annually.[3] There are estimated thousands of cases per year in tropical regions with freshwater stingrays that occupy inland rivers. [3] In one retrospective review of 119 cases seen in a California emergency department over 8 years, 80% of stingray victims were male, with an average age of 28 years (range 9 to 68 years old).[4] In a prospective study of freshwater stingray injuries in Brazil, 80% to 90% of the injuries were in men.[5] The most common site of injury is the lower extremities, followed by the upper extremities.[4][5] The majority of stingray injuries have low morbidity, with higher rates of serious injuries and complications in freshwater stings compared to marine stings. In the United States and Indo-Pacific nations, fatalities related to stingray injuries occur one to two times a year, compared to fatality rates up to 8 per year in South American nations related to Amazonian stingrays.[3]

Pathophysiology

Stingrays are not known to be aggressive, nor are they known to act defensively. In fact, the primary defensive action of the stingray is simply to swim away from the area. However, when attacked by a predator or stepped on, the ray will use its tail to puncture and envenomate its potential attacker. Human injuries are most common on the extremities of swimmers and divers and those who accidentally step on a stingray. One way to prevent this is to slide or shuffle through the sand instead of walking.

The mechanism of stingray stings includes both mechanical and venomous injury. First, the barbs pierce through the skin, causing a laceration or puncture wound. In most cases, these wounds are minor, but there are reports of arterial or spinal cord injury related to stingray wounds. The sheath of the barb can also remain in the patient’s skin, which may require debridement for removal. The most common venomous effect is severe pain, but the venom can also cause headaches, diaphoresis, vertigo, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, syncope, muscle cramps, fasciculations, dyspnea, cardiac arrhythmias, hypotension, and seizures.[4][6]

History and Physical

Patients will present with a puncture wound or laceration and report pain out of proportion to the wound. They will often have a known exposure to a stingray or may have a wound on their foot and report that they stepped on something in the ocean. The onset of severe pain is usually immediate. It reaches maximum intensity within 30 to 90 minutes and can last for up to 48 hours.[6] The site of the wound may have evidence of edema and discoloration. In delayed presentations, there may be evidence of local necrosis. Patients may also report systemic symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, lightheadedness, syncope, shortness of breath, headache, abdominal pain, vertigo, or seizures.[3]

Evaluation

The wound should be evaluated using standard procedures, including irrigation of the wound. Plain films may be obtained to evaluate for foreign bodies at the discretion of the provider. Stingray barbs are radioopaque and are visible on plain films. There is not currently a recommended standard for obtaining radiographs in stingray injuries. However, in one retrospective review, 57% of patients had radiographic imaging. Foreign body identification was found in only 2 cases of 119 (and only definitively in one case; there was a possible barb in the other case). [4] 

If the patient presents with an injury to the chest or abdomen or severe systemic symptoms, consider an electrocardiogram (EKG), cardiac monitoring, lab work, and chest radiography. If there is a concern for severe systemic illness, including cardiogenic shock, the patient should be transferred to a facility with ICU capabilities, and a medical toxicology consult may be obtained.

Treatment / Management

The standard treatment for stingray injuries is hot water immersion.[4][6][7] Stingray venom is heat-labile and can be inactivated by heat. Water should be heated to a temperature that will not result in burns, and the temperature should be tested on a non-affected extremity, as the patient may have impaired sensation on the injured extremity. Hot water immersion should be initiated as soon as possible, ideally in the field by lifeguards or paramedics. A small prospective study found that hot water immersion alone resulted in statistically significant pain reduction. [7] Another retrospective study found that hot water immersion alone provided effective pain relief in 9 out of 10 patients. Oral NSAIDs or opioids were used concurrently with hot water immersion in the other 10% of patients. Only 2% of patients required additional pain control at discharge.[4] In patients with freshwater stings in Brazil, hot water immersion was found to help reduce pain but did not decrease rates of skin necrosis.[5]

In addition to hot water immersion, standard wound care techniques should be applied. Irrigate the wound. If there is suspicion for a retained foreign body, obtain radiographs, explore the injury and remove any foreign bodies as they may result in delayed healing and wound necrosis. If the wound is small, it should be left to close by secondary intention or delayed primary closure, due to the risks of infection. Tetanus status should be inquired about and tetanus immunizations updated as necessary. If there is evidence of necrosis, the wound should be debrided. [3] 

There is not a clear consensus on whether antibiotic prophylaxis should be given with some experts arguing that most injuries are minor and prophylaxis should only be given for deep penetrating wounds, wounds complicated by a foreign body, or patients who are immunocompromised. However, in a retrospective review, 70% of patients were prescribed prophylactic antibiotics on initial presentation, and only one patient returned with possible early wound infection. Of the 30% of patients not prescribed antimicrobial prophylaxis, 17% returned with signs of wound infection.[4] Antibiotic prophylaxis, therefore, seems prudent, and coverage should include gram-negative species, including Vibrio, as well as Staphylococcus and Streptococcus.

Differential Diagnosis

  • Laceration

  • Cellulitis

  • Necrotizing fasciitis 

  • Sea urchin

  • Lionfish

  • Jellyfish

  • Coral

  • Sea anemone

  • Shark bite

  • Octopus bite

  • Alligator or crocodile attack

  • Ciguatera

  • Scombroid

  • Pufferfish tetrodotoxin

  • Shellfish toxin

Prognosis

Stingray injuries, whether through puncture, laceration, or envenomation, usually have a good prognosis. It is important to instruct patients to look for signs of infection after discharge. While it is possible to develop further complications such as infection, most patients will have a significantly decreased amount of pain in one to two days after the incident. Necrosis following marine envenomations was rarely reported in the United States but reported at high rates after freshwater stings in Brazil. A study of 84 freshwater stings in Brazil reported a rate of ulcers and necrosis in 90.4% of cases. The ulcers lasted approximately 3 months and often resulted in scars.[5] 

Systemic toxicity or death related to stingray stings is rare and associated with stings resulting in penetrating trauma to the abdomen, chest, or neck resulting in a cardiac laceration, cardiac tamponade, pneumothorax, airway compromise, or hemorrhagic shock. There are cases of delayed fatality secondary to septic shock, osteomyelitis, gangrene, and wound botulism from an infected wound.[3]

Complications

The most common complication of stingray sting is wound infection or necrosis. There are significantly higher rates of skin necrosis associated with freshwater stingray injuries.[5] There are case reports of necrotizing fasciitis following stingray injury.[8]

Consultations

For patients with severe toxic effects, including systemic illness, cardiogenic shock, syncope, shortness of breath, or seizures, a medical toxicology consult may be obtained. The local Poison Control Center may also be a useful consult for these patients.

Deterrence and Patient Education

Stingrays are generally docile animals and are not known for actively attacking humans unless threatened. Stingray injuries can be prevented by encouraging swimmers, divers, and beach-goers to avoid provoking stingrays. Most injuries occur due to accidentally stepping on a ray. This can be prevented by shuffling through the sand without lifting the feet or using a stick or pole to poke the sand ahead of placing the feet. Divers should avoid swimming too close to the seafloor. A fisher who accidentally catches a stingray should not attempt to disentangle it from a net or line. [3]

Enhancing Healthcare Team Outcomes

An interprofessional team approach to managing stingray injuries includes proper training of local medics and lifeguards. Many patients with minor stingray injuries do not present to healthcare facilities and may be managed in the field setting by these first responders. In a review of 153 stingray cases reported to Texas poison centers, 61% were not managed in healthcare facilities.[9] First-responders should be trained to immerse stingray wounds in hot water. They should also require training to transfer the patient to a medical facility for wounds with ongoing bleeding, deep penetration, evidence of systemic toxicity, ongoing pain, or patients with comorbid medical conditions. Within the emergency department setting, nurses and technicians are integral in ensuring that the patient has continuous hot water immersion for 30 to 90 minutes. Emergency clinicians should promptly manage any severe effects of the toxin or wound. Medical toxicology may be consulted for severe effects as well.

Review Questions

  • Access free multiple choice questions on this topic.

  • Comment on this article.

Figure

Sting ray with barb. Image courtesy S Bhimji MD

References

1.

O’Connell C, Myatt T, Clark RF, Coffey C, Nguyen BJ. Stingray Envenomation. J Emerg Med. 2019 Feb;56(2):230-231. [PubMed: 30738566]

2.

Sachett JAG, Sampaio VS, Silva IM, Shibuya A, Vale FF, Costa FP, Pardal PPO, Lacerda MVG, Monteiro WM. Delayed healthcare and secondary infections following freshwater stingray injuries: risk factors for a poorly understood health issue in the Amazon. Rev Soc Bras Med Trop. 2018 Sep-Oct;51(5):651-659. [PubMed: 30304272]

3.

Diaz JH. The evaluation, management, and prevention of stingray injuries in travelers. J Travel Med. 2008 Mar-Apr;15(2):102-9. [PubMed: 18346243]

4.

Clark RF, Girard RH, Rao D, Ly BT, Davis DP. Stingray envenomation: a retrospective review of clinical presentation and treatment in 119 cases. J Emerg Med. 2007 Jul;33(1):33-7. [PubMed: 17630073]

5.

Haddad V, Neto DG, de Paula Neto JB, de Luna Marques FP, Barbaro KC. Freshwater stingrays: study of epidemiologic, clinic and therapeutic aspects based on 84 envenomings in humans and some enzymatic activities of the venom. Toxicon. 2004 Mar 01;43(3):287-94. [PubMed: 15033327]

6.

Meyer PK. Stingray injuries. Wilderness Environ Med. 1997 Feb;8(1):24-8. [PubMed: 11990133]

7.

Myatt T, Nguyen BJ, Clark RF, Coffey CH, O’Connell CW. A Prospective Study of Stingray Injury and Envenomation Outcomes. J Emerg Med. 2018 Aug;55(2):213-217. [PubMed: 29803633]

8.

Ho PL, Tang WM, Lo KS, Yuen KY. Necrotizing fasciitis due to Vibrio alginolyticus following an injury inflicted by a stingray. Scand J Infect Dis. 1998;30(2):192-3. [PubMed: 9730311]

9.

Forrester MB. Pattern of stingray injuries reported to Texas poison centers from 1998 to 2004. Hum Exp Toxicol. 2005 Dec;24(12):639-42. [PubMed: 16408617]

Disclosure: Aubri Charnigo declares no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies.

Disclosure: Geoffrey Thiele declares no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies.

Disclosure: Erwin Kong declares no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies.

Disclosure: Rebecca Ondrus declares no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies.

Stingray Sting – StatPearls – NCBI Bookshelf

Aubri Charnigo; Geoffrey Thiele; Erwin L. Kong; Rebecca J. Ondrus.

Author Information and Affiliations

Last Update: July 19, 2022.

Continuing Education Activity

Stingray envenomations are common injuries. Practitioners should recognize that these injuries vary in level of severity, and clinical concerns should vary accordingly. The type of stingray involved and the anatomical region of injury affect the associated morbidity and, in some cases, mortality. Short-term management includes the removal of any retained barbs, wound care, and immersion of the injury in hot water to inactivate the toxin. This activity outlines the evaluation and treatment of stingray stings and reviews the role of the interprofessional team in the care of patients with this condition.

Objectives:

  • Review the risk factors for stingray envenomation.

  • Outline the management of stingray envenomation.

  • Describe the complications of stingray envenomation.

  • Summarize the importance of collaboration among interprofessional team members to enhance the care of stingray injuries and improve outcomes for affected patients.

Access free multiple choice questions on this topic.

Introduction

Stingrays are a subset of the cartilaginous fish commonly known as rays. Rays are members of the Chondrichthyes class, which also includes sharks and skates. All rays share a flat body with enlarged pectoral fins that permanently fuse to their heads. The mouth of a stingray is on the ventral side of the animal. The most dangerous aspect of the stingray is the tail due to the spinal blade, also known as its stinger or barb. Rays with longer spines located more distally on their tail represent the greatest danger for sting injuries.[1]

Etiology

Stingrays can have between one and three spinal blades. The stinger is covered with rows of sharp spines made of vasodentin, a cartilaginous material that can easily cut through the skin. The stingray is unique from other venomous animals in that the venom storage is not in a gland. The venom is stored inside its own secretory cells within the grooves on the undersides of the spine. Freshwater stingrays have more secretory cells that cover a larger area along the blade. Because of this fact, freshwater stingrays have a venom that is more toxic than that of their saltwater relatives. The venom of the stingray has been relatively unstudied but is known to be heat-labile and cardiotoxic.[1][2]

Epidemiology

Stingrays are very common throughout tropical marine waters and freshwaters. There are over 150 species of stingray worldwide, ranging in size from inches to 6.5 feet and in the larger species weighing as much as 800 pounds. Stingrays often feed in or near coral reefs, causing frequent human injuries. In the United States, there are approximately 750 to 2000 stingray injuries reported annually.[3] There are estimated thousands of cases per year in tropical regions with freshwater stingrays that occupy inland rivers.[3] In one retrospective review of 119 cases seen in a California emergency department over 8 years, 80% of stingray victims were male, with an average age of 28 years (range 9 to 68 years old).[4] In a prospective study of freshwater stingray injuries in Brazil, 80% to 90% of the injuries were in men.[5] The most common site of injury is the lower extremities, followed by the upper extremities. [4][5] The majority of stingray injuries have low morbidity, with higher rates of serious injuries and complications in freshwater stings compared to marine stings. In the United States and Indo-Pacific nations, fatalities related to stingray injuries occur one to two times a year, compared to fatality rates up to 8 per year in South American nations related to Amazonian stingrays.[3]

Pathophysiology

Stingrays are not known to be aggressive, nor are they known to act defensively. In fact, the primary defensive action of the stingray is simply to swim away from the area. However, when attacked by a predator or stepped on, the ray will use its tail to puncture and envenomate its potential attacker. Human injuries are most common on the extremities of swimmers and divers and those who accidentally step on a stingray. One way to prevent this is to slide or shuffle through the sand instead of walking.

The mechanism of stingray stings includes both mechanical and venomous injury. First, the barbs pierce through the skin, causing a laceration or puncture wound. In most cases, these wounds are minor, but there are reports of arterial or spinal cord injury related to stingray wounds. The sheath of the barb can also remain in the patient’s skin, which may require debridement for removal. The most common venomous effect is severe pain, but the venom can also cause headaches, diaphoresis, vertigo, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, syncope, muscle cramps, fasciculations, dyspnea, cardiac arrhythmias, hypotension, and seizures.[4][6]

History and Physical

Patients will present with a puncture wound or laceration and report pain out of proportion to the wound. They will often have a known exposure to a stingray or may have a wound on their foot and report that they stepped on something in the ocean. The onset of severe pain is usually immediate. It reaches maximum intensity within 30 to 90 minutes and can last for up to 48 hours.[6] The site of the wound may have evidence of edema and discoloration. In delayed presentations, there may be evidence of local necrosis. Patients may also report systemic symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, lightheadedness, syncope, shortness of breath, headache, abdominal pain, vertigo, or seizures.[3]

Evaluation

The wound should be evaluated using standard procedures, including irrigation of the wound. Plain films may be obtained to evaluate for foreign bodies at the discretion of the provider. Stingray barbs are radioopaque and are visible on plain films. There is not currently a recommended standard for obtaining radiographs in stingray injuries. However, in one retrospective review, 57% of patients had radiographic imaging. Foreign body identification was found in only 2 cases of 119 (and only definitively in one case; there was a possible barb in the other case).[4] 

If the patient presents with an injury to the chest or abdomen or severe systemic symptoms, consider an electrocardiogram (EKG), cardiac monitoring, lab work, and chest radiography. If there is a concern for severe systemic illness, including cardiogenic shock, the patient should be transferred to a facility with ICU capabilities, and a medical toxicology consult may be obtained.

Treatment / Management

The standard treatment for stingray injuries is hot water immersion.[4][6][7] Stingray venom is heat-labile and can be inactivated by heat. Water should be heated to a temperature that will not result in burns, and the temperature should be tested on a non-affected extremity, as the patient may have impaired sensation on the injured extremity. Hot water immersion should be initiated as soon as possible, ideally in the field by lifeguards or paramedics. A small prospective study found that hot water immersion alone resulted in statistically significant pain reduction.[7] Another retrospective study found that hot water immersion alone provided effective pain relief in 9 out of 10 patients. Oral NSAIDs or opioids were used concurrently with hot water immersion in the other 10% of patients. Only 2% of patients required additional pain control at discharge.[4] In patients with freshwater stings in Brazil, hot water immersion was found to help reduce pain but did not decrease rates of skin necrosis.[5]

In addition to hot water immersion, standard wound care techniques should be applied. Irrigate the wound. If there is suspicion for a retained foreign body, obtain radiographs, explore the injury and remove any foreign bodies as they may result in delayed healing and wound necrosis. If the wound is small, it should be left to close by secondary intention or delayed primary closure, due to the risks of infection. Tetanus status should be inquired about and tetanus immunizations updated as necessary. If there is evidence of necrosis, the wound should be debrided.[3] 

There is not a clear consensus on whether antibiotic prophylaxis should be given with some experts arguing that most injuries are minor and prophylaxis should only be given for deep penetrating wounds, wounds complicated by a foreign body, or patients who are immunocompromised. However, in a retrospective review, 70% of patients were prescribed prophylactic antibiotics on initial presentation, and only one patient returned with possible early wound infection. Of the 30% of patients not prescribed antimicrobial prophylaxis, 17% returned with signs of wound infection.[4] Antibiotic prophylaxis, therefore, seems prudent, and coverage should include gram-negative species, including Vibrio, as well as Staphylococcus and Streptococcus.

Differential Diagnosis

  • Laceration

  • Cellulitis

  • Necrotizing fasciitis 

  • Sea urchin

  • Lionfish

  • Jellyfish

  • Coral

  • Sea anemone

  • Shark bite

  • Octopus bite

  • Alligator or crocodile attack

  • Ciguatera

  • Scombroid

  • Pufferfish tetrodotoxin

  • Shellfish toxin

Prognosis

Stingray injuries, whether through puncture, laceration, or envenomation, usually have a good prognosis. It is important to instruct patients to look for signs of infection after discharge. While it is possible to develop further complications such as infection, most patients will have a significantly decreased amount of pain in one to two days after the incident. Necrosis following marine envenomations was rarely reported in the United States but reported at high rates after freshwater stings in Brazil. A study of 84 freshwater stings in Brazil reported a rate of ulcers and necrosis in 90.4% of cases. The ulcers lasted approximately 3 months and often resulted in scars.[5] 

Systemic toxicity or death related to stingray stings is rare and associated with stings resulting in penetrating trauma to the abdomen, chest, or neck resulting in a cardiac laceration, cardiac tamponade, pneumothorax, airway compromise, or hemorrhagic shock. There are cases of delayed fatality secondary to septic shock, osteomyelitis, gangrene, and wound botulism from an infected wound.[3]

Complications

The most common complication of stingray sting is wound infection or necrosis. There are significantly higher rates of skin necrosis associated with freshwater stingray injuries.[5] There are case reports of necrotizing fasciitis following stingray injury.[8]

Consultations

For patients with severe toxic effects, including systemic illness, cardiogenic shock, syncope, shortness of breath, or seizures, a medical toxicology consult may be obtained. The local Poison Control Center may also be a useful consult for these patients.

Deterrence and Patient Education

Stingrays are generally docile animals and are not known for actively attacking humans unless threatened. Stingray injuries can be prevented by encouraging swimmers, divers, and beach-goers to avoid provoking stingrays. Most injuries occur due to accidentally stepping on a ray. This can be prevented by shuffling through the sand without lifting the feet or using a stick or pole to poke the sand ahead of placing the feet. Divers should avoid swimming too close to the seafloor. A fisher who accidentally catches a stingray should not attempt to disentangle it from a net or line. [3]

Enhancing Healthcare Team Outcomes

An interprofessional team approach to managing stingray injuries includes proper training of local medics and lifeguards. Many patients with minor stingray injuries do not present to healthcare facilities and may be managed in the field setting by these first responders. In a review of 153 stingray cases reported to Texas poison centers, 61% were not managed in healthcare facilities.[9] First-responders should be trained to immerse stingray wounds in hot water. They should also require training to transfer the patient to a medical facility for wounds with ongoing bleeding, deep penetration, evidence of systemic toxicity, ongoing pain, or patients with comorbid medical conditions. Within the emergency department setting, nurses and technicians are integral in ensuring that the patient has continuous hot water immersion for 30 to 90 minutes. Emergency clinicians should promptly manage any severe effects of the toxin or wound. Medical toxicology may be consulted for severe effects as well.

Review Questions

  • Access free multiple choice questions on this topic.

  • Comment on this article.

Figure

Sting ray with barb. Image courtesy S Bhimji MD

References

1.

O’Connell C, Myatt T, Clark RF, Coffey C, Nguyen BJ. Stingray Envenomation. J Emerg Med. 2019 Feb;56(2):230-231. [PubMed: 30738566]

2.

Sachett JAG, Sampaio VS, Silva IM, Shibuya A, Vale FF, Costa FP, Pardal PPO, Lacerda MVG, Monteiro WM. Delayed healthcare and secondary infections following freshwater stingray injuries: risk factors for a poorly understood health issue in the Amazon. Rev Soc Bras Med Trop. 2018 Sep-Oct;51(5):651-659. [PubMed: 30304272]

3.

Diaz JH. The evaluation, management, and prevention of stingray injuries in travelers. J Travel Med. 2008 Mar-Apr;15(2):102-9. [PubMed: 18346243]

4.

Clark RF, Girard RH, Rao D, Ly BT, Davis DP. Stingray envenomation: a retrospective review of clinical presentation and treatment in 119 cases. J Emerg Med. 2007 Jul;33(1):33-7. [PubMed: 17630073]

5.

Haddad V, Neto DG, de Paula Neto JB, de Luna Marques FP, Barbaro KC. Freshwater stingrays: study of epidemiologic, clinic and therapeutic aspects based on 84 envenomings in humans and some enzymatic activities of the venom. Toxicon. 2004 Mar 01;43(3):287-94. [PubMed: 15033327]

6.

Meyer PK. Stingray injuries. Wilderness Environ Med. 1997 Feb;8(1):24-8. [PubMed: 11990133]

7.

Myatt T, Nguyen BJ, Clark RF, Coffey CH, O’Connell CW. A Prospective Study of Stingray Injury and Envenomation Outcomes. J Emerg Med. 2018 Aug;55(2):213-217. [PubMed: 29803633]

8.

Ho PL, Tang WM, Lo KS, Yuen KY. Necrotizing fasciitis due to Vibrio alginolyticus following an injury inflicted by a stingray. Scand J Infect Dis. 1998;30(2):192-3. [PubMed: 9730311]

9.

Forrester MB. Pattern of stingray injuries reported to Texas poison centers from 1998 to 2004. Hum Exp Toxicol. 2005 Dec;24(12):639-42. [PubMed: 16408617]

Disclosure: Aubri Charnigo declares no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies.

Disclosure: Geoffrey Thiele declares no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies.

Disclosure: Erwin Kong declares no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies.

Disclosure: Rebecca Ondrus declares no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies.

Scientists have discovered a new species of stingray and called it “six-eyed”

A Russian-Japanese research team, which includes Aleksey Orlov, a member of IPEE RAS, has discovered a new species of stingrays. A previously unknown representative of cartilaginous fish was caught in the central Kuriles. Due to its external features, it was named Bathyraja sexoculata – a six-eyed stingray. It is assumed that this species is endemic, it lives locally and only in the waters of Russia. The find is described in an article published in the prestigious international scientific journal Zootaxa.

“Several individuals of this species were caught by my colleague from VNIRO and Moscow State University Ilya Gordeev during a commercial voyage in the fishery of the northern single-finned greenling in the central Kuriles (Simushir Island), – says Alexei Orlov, chief researcher of VNIRO and the TSU Biological Institute. – The scientific name of the new stingray is Bathyraja sexoculata, which literally means “six-eyed”. I suggested this option because of the three pairs of light spots on the disk and head of this species. The official name of the “newcomer” is given by the place of catch – the Simushir stingray.

According to the ichthyologist, outwardly the new species does not differ much from closely related representatives of the subgenus Arctoraja – Smirnov’s rays Bathyraja (Arctoraja) smirnovi and shield-bearing Bathyraja (Arctoraja) parmifera. However, the sequence of the CO1 gene in the find turned out to be unique, which made it possible to establish the status of this species as previously unknown to science.
After the genetic examination, Russian scientists sent sequences (nucleotide sequences) and photos to Japanese colleagues Hajima Ishihara and Ryo Misawa. Comparing them with their own genetic data of already known stingrays that were not in the Genbank, Japanese experts came to the conclusion that the discovered species is new to science.

This was followed by their visit to Moscow, to the Zoological Museum of Moscow State University, where VNIRO employees handed over a type series – five specimens of skates. For two days, Japanese ichthyologists studied these specimens and were convinced of the correctness of the preliminary conclusions. Based on the results of the research, a joint scientific article was prepared in which the authors describe the morphological and genetic features of the six-eyed stingray. Presumably it is endemic, that is, it has a local distribution.

– Many North Pacific stingrays have a wide range and are found in waters adjacent to Russia in Japan or the United States. This species is still known only from the waters of the central Kuriles,” says Alexei Orlov. How widespread it is, further research will show. But my ten-year experience of working in the northern Kuriles shows that it is not there. To the south is also unlikely, since the deep Kuril straits prevent the spread. Most likely, it is a local endemic.

Five scientists took part in the description of the new species: Alexey Orlov (VNIRO, TSU, DSU, IPEE RAS, PIBR DSC RAS), Svetlana Orlova (VNIRO, Moscow, Russia), Ilya Gordeev (VNIRO, Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia), Ryo Misawa (Tohoko National Fisheries Institute, Hachinohe, Japan), Hajime Ishihara (W&I Associates Co. Ltd., Yokohama, Japan).

Russian and Japanese ichthyologists have been closely cooperating for many years. So, in September 2019, two Russian experts – a scientist at the BI TSU Yuri Dyldin and a leading researcher at the Pacific Branch of VNIRO Igor Volvenko – took part in the work on the international Red List of sharks, rays and chimeras of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), conducted on the basis of the University Nagasaki. Based on the results of a week-long work, scientists determined the conservation status of more than 30 representatives of the class of cartilaginous fish, for which recommendations for protection and rational exploitation will be developed in the future, including a reduction in catch volumes or its complete cessation.

A year earlier, Yuri Dyldin and the curator of the ichthyological collection of the National Museum of Nature and Science in Tokyo, Keiichi Matsuura, identified and described a new species of puffer fish, which was called the “patterned fish dog”.

Photo from the archive of Ilya Gordeev and Alexei Orlov

Materials on the topic:

News of Siberian science: “Scientists have discovered a new species of stingray and called it six-eyed”

MC: “Tomsk scientists have described a new type of stingray ov from the Sea of ​​Okhotsk”

Wounds and wound infections.

Journal named after prof. B.M. Kostyuchenko

Volume 9, No 4 (2022)

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ORIGINAL RESEARCH

The first experience of using vacuum therapy in the prevention of suppuration of sutured soft tissue wounds

V. V. Fedyushkin,
S. N. Pyatakov,
A. G. Baryshev,
S. N. Pyatakova,
S. N. Shcherba,
I. V. Golikov,
E. N. Shubrov,
S. P. Muzhikov,
M. Yu. Eremenko,
A. S. Shcherba

PDF (Rus)

6-15 49

Annotation tissues, according to different sources, occur in 3-22% of cases.
The aim of the study was a comparative analysis of the healing of sutured wounds after surgical interventions for purulent-necrotic diseases of soft tissues.
Materials and research methods. The study is retrospective, prospective, comparative. All patients were divided into 2 groups (main group and comparison group). The main group of observations (n ​​= 58) consisted of patients who underwent vacuum drainage of the subcutaneous tissue of sutured wounds after surgery for purulent-necrotic diseases of soft tissues in the period from July 2019 to November 2021. A retrospective analysis of the results of surgical treatment of 80 patients was also carried out according to the data case histories of the comparison group. In these patients, drainage of the subcutaneous tissue of sutured wounds after operations for purulent-necrotic diseases of soft tissues was performed using the traditional flow method. Both groups of observations were representative in terms of sex, age and comorbidity.
Research results. In the comparison group, complications in the form of suppuration were noted in 17 (17.5%) patients. In 10 (12.5 %) patients, sutures diverged against the background of marginal skin necrosis. Out of 58 patients of the main group operated according to the technique developed by us with the use of vacuum drainage of sutured wounds, purulent-septic complications were not recorded in any patient. In all cases, wound healing was completed according to the type of primary intention.
Conclusion. The use of the proposed method of vacuum drainage made it possible to achieve improved treatment results in the early postoperative period.

CLINICAL OBSERVATIONS

Experience in the treatment of a patient with acute ischiorectal paraproctitis complicated by Fournier’s gangrene using local negative pressure

V. G. Petrov,
S. Yu. Mukhacheva,
A. I. Alimov,
I. A. Alimov,
F. Sh. Aliev,
A. V. Efanov,
N. S. Saveliev

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16-21 23

Annotation

The article presents a clinical case of successful treatment of a patient with ischiorectal abscess complicated by extensive purulent-necrotic phlegmon of the anterior abdominal wall and right thigh. In the treatment, the local negative pressure technique was used. It has been shown that its use in combination with surgical debridement and rational systemic antibiotic therapy contributes to the successful treatment of this life-threatening pathology.

Combined plasty in post-traumatic tibial osteomyelitis (clinical observation)

G. O. Smirnova,
A. Yu. Tskaev,
E. B. Denisov,
T. A. Demicheva,
A. P. Zalitis,
A. V. Gavrilov

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24-31 26

Annotation

The article presents a clinical case of successful complex surgical treatment of a 62-year-old patient with chronic post-traumatic tibial osteomyelitis. A two-stage surgical treatment was demonstrated, including an intervention aimed at sanitation of a chronic purulent focus in the lower third of the tibia, and a complex reconstructive and restorative operation to eliminate the bone cavity and soft tissue defect. The reconstructive stage of the complex surgical treatment consisted of combined plasty: bone grafting with autospongiosis obtained from the iliac crest, and soft tissue plasty with an islet sural musculocutaneous flap on the distal pedicle, as a result of which it was possible to completely eliminate the defect of the tibia, soft and integumentary tissues with good functional and cosmetic results.

Experience in the treatment of chronic gunshot osteomyelitis of the calcaneus with necrotic wound of the calcaneal region

A. I. Anikin,
O. A. Dedenkov,
V. V. Knyazev,
VO Samoilova

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32-37 21

Annotation

The article presents a clinical case of successful treatment of a patient with chronic gunshot calcaneal osteomyelitis and necrotic wound of the calcaneal region. A two-stage surgical treatment was demonstrated with the elimination of the wound defect with a sural flap, as a result of which it was possible to achieve a complete recovery of the patient.