15 research outputs found
Five years of snake envenoming in far north Queensland
Objective: To describe the epidemiology, clinical features, treatment and outcomes of patients with elapid snake envenoming in far north Queensland.
Methods: Review of patients admitted with snake envenoming to Cairns Base Hospital, Queensland, from 1 January 1996–31 December 2000.
Results: A total of 264 patients presented to the hospital with a diagnosis of snakebite. Of these, 27 (10%) had clinical evidence of envenoming, including seven children. All envenomed patients had been bitten on a limb. Two patients had correct initial first aid applied. Commercially available venom detection kits were used in 23 patients; 14 (61%) bite site swabs were positive, but only four (23%) of 17 urine Venom Detection Kits were positive. Antivenom was administered to 20 envenomed patients. The five brown snake envenomed patients required a median of 9 ampoules of antivenom to treat their coagulopathy. Sixteen patients were admitted to the ICU, with six requiring ventilation. Six patients were successfully managed in the ED observation ward. Three patients envenomed by a taipan, and one by a death adder were discharged with ongoing neurological symptoms. There was one death from brown snake envenoming.
Conclusions: The incidence of snakebite and envenoming in far north Queensland is higher than reported from hospitals in capital cities and is a significant health issue
The detection of an extremely bright fast radio burst in a phased array feed survey
We report the detection of an ultra-bright fast radio burst (FRB) from a modest, 3.4-day pilot survey with the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder. The survey was conducted in a wide-field fly's-eye configuration using the phased-array-feed technology deployed on the array to instantaneously observe an effective area of 160 deg, and achieve an exposure totaling 13200 deg hr. We constrain the position of FRB 170107 to a region in size (90% containment) and its fluence to be 586 Jy ms. The spectrum of the burst shows a sharp cutoff above 1400 MHz, which could be either due to scintillation or an intrinsic feature of the burst. This confirms the existence of an ultra-bright (>20 Jy ms) population of FRBs