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Marine animal stings or bites
Definition
Marine animal stings or bites refer to poisonous bites or stings from any form of sea life, including jellyfish.
Alternative Names
Stings - marine animals; Bites - marine animalsConsiderations
The majority of these types of stings occur in salt water. Some types of marine stings or bites can be deadly.
Causes
Causes include bites or stings from various types of marine life including: jellyfish, Portuguese Man-of-War, stingray, stonefish, scorpion fish, catfish, sea urchins, sea anemone, hydroid, coral, cone shell, moray eels, sharks, barracudas, and electric eels.
Symptoms
There may be pain, burning, swelling, redness, or bleeding near the area of the bite or sting. Other symptoms can affect the entire body, and may include:
- Cramps
- Diarrhea
- Difficulty breathing
- Groin pain, armpit pain
- Fever
- Nausea or vomiting
- Paralysis
- Sweating
- Weakness, faintness, dizziness
First Aid
- Wear gloves, if possible when removing stingers.
- Wipe off stingers or tentacles with a towel.
- Wash the area with salt water.
- Soak the wound in as hot of water as the patient can tolerate for 30-90 minutes, if toldto do so by trained personnel.
- For some types of stings/bites, you may be told to apply vinegar or a meat tenderizer/water solution to neutralize the venom.
Do Not
- DO NOT attempt to remove stingers without protecting your own hands.
- DO NOT raise the affected body part above the level of the heart.
- DO NOT allow the patient to exercise.
- DO NOT give any medication, unless told to do so by a health care provider.
Call immediately for emergency medical assistance if
Seek medical help if the person has difficulty breathing, uncontrolled bleeding, or other body-wide (generalized) symptoms.
Prevention
- Swim near a lifeguard.
- Observe posted signs that may warn of danger from jellyfish or other hazardous marine life.
- Do not touch unfamiliar marine life. Even dead animals or severed tentacles may contain poisonous venom.
Reviewed By: Eric Perez, MD, Department of Emergency Medicine, St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center, New York, NY. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network.

