Friday, August 15, 2025

Late diagnosis of violin spider bite could cost baby his toes

Doctors in Nayarit believe they have saved a 10-month-old baby’s leg after he was bitten by a violin spider.

Kevin Cataño was bitten last weekend in Acaponeta but his condition was not diagnosed until a discoloration of the skin appeared on several parts of his body, which was later diagnosed as necrosis.

At that point doctors at a clinic in Acaponeta began to suspect a spider bite and transferred the child to a hospital in Tepic. As he was being admitted, the boy suffered a seizure and cardiac arrest.

When it was determined that the bite was that of a violin spider doctors sought help from the the Federal Commission for Protection Against Health Risks (Cofepris) to obtain the necessary antidote, which was donated by the pharmaceutical laboratory Silanes.

The boy’s condition started to improve following administration of the antidote and despite an early assessment that the boy’s left leg would have to be amputated, physicians say the limb has been saved.

The only current risk is that he will lose his toes.

Medical staff have done more than treat Kevin for the bite.

Doctor Daniel Balderas said several of his colleagues have not only given their time but the money to pay for the medicine needed in their patient’s treatment.

He said the antidote had been sought in both Mexico and the United States but proved hard to find.

“. . . nobody had it, it’s not being produced. We were told that a synthetic antidote is in development, but for the time being hospitals . . . will have to resort to an alternative corticoid and dapsone-based treatment.”

The violin spider is also known as the brown recluse spider.

Source: El Universal (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.

As Mexico’s poverty rate drops, southern states lag behind

0
Meanwhile, northern states like Baja California and Nuevo León register some of the lowest poverty levels in the country.
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum and US President Trump

Trump: ‘Mexico does what we tell them to do’

1
The real bosses are the Mexican people, Sheinbaum declared in response to the lastest button-pushing statements from the U.S. president.
Rain clouds gather over Mexico City

After an unusually wet summer, ‘average’ September rains expected to bring further drought relief to Mexico

0
"Only a few very limited regions on the northern border" are still experiencing persistent drought, the director of Mexico's weather service said.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity