Thanks to Dr. Joshi for today’s Morning Report!

 

Brown Recluse Spiders

Species Facts:

  • “violin spider”
  • Loxosceles reclusa (genus name)
  • Sicariidae (family name)
    • family of 6 eyed spiders known for their necrotic bites
    • most spiders have 8 eyes
    • Two genus in this family (Loxosceles and Sicarius)
    • Genus Sicarius is known as the assassin spider
  • Lots of Loxosceles… (11 species)
    • Apachea, arizonica, destera, laeta (cali, south america), rufescenes(Africa)

 

Identifying Markers:

  • Small (6 to 22mm)
  • Violin-shaped marking on the dorsum of their cephalothorax
  • Create small and inconsequential webs
  • Like to hang out in home storage areas or outdoors like woodpiles

 

Famous for…

  • Being shy – enjoying closed dark spaces, hates feeling intimidated
  • Local wound necrosis (dermonecrotic arachnidism)
  • Rarely – systemic illness and collapse
  • Being confused for MRSA, anthrax, herpes, diabetic ulcer, squamous cell CA
  • Being blamed for a lot of attacks (pts are unreliable for description of spiders)
  • Documented bites are rare

 

Number Facts:

  • 2003:  2,843 brown recluse spider exposures reported to US poison centers; 40% of those were treated in a medical center
  • 23.3% of all exposures were considered moderate to major with 1 death

 

Pathophysiology:

  • Venom includes:
    • Sphingomyelinase D
      •  primary dermonecrotic factors
      • disrupts cellular membranes
      • causes serotonin release
      • platelet aggregation and thrombosis of small capillaries
    • Ribonuclease
    • Hyaluronidase
      • facilitates the spread of the venom locally
      • enhances tissue destruction
    • Deoxyribonuclease
    • Lipase
    • Phosphohydrolase
  • Cytotoxic elements of venom leads to endothelial cell damage
    • This attracts neutrophils, which leads to more destruction
    • PMLs also contribute to dermonecrosis
  • Venom causes erythrocyte hemolysis
  • Leukocytes release cytokines which activates the complement system

 

Clinical Presentation:

  • Initially mild bite and not noticed
  • Within 24 hours patients will present for treatment of a painful purple papule
  • Central purple lesion is surrounded by a blanched ischemic zone and rim of indurate erythema
  • Central papule can coagulate and become thrombosed
  • Results in necrotic, ulcerating wound
  • Eschar may slough off and extend into subcut fat; this may require surgical grafting
  • Systemic Loxoscelism – fevers, chills, nausea, arthralgias, morbiliform rash, hemolysis
    • Can occur 24-72 hrs after bite and is not correlated with size or severity of skin reaction
  • Rarely – can present in DIC, renal failure, seizures

 

Diagnosis:

  • Presumptive and based on history and physical findings
  • Positive history of spider bite is not always evident, spider is shy after all
  • Patients come a few days later when the bite has necrosed
  • Serologic assays are not routinely available nor sensitive
  • DIC and septic work up for acute presentations

 

Treatment:

  • Generally all that is need is routine wound care, including tetanus
  • Routine antibiotics are not indicated
  • Only use surgical intervention for scar debridement (not to cut out necrotic tissue)
  • Supportive care for DIC, renal failure, ect.

 

Experimental Treatment:

  • Dapsone:  theoretically inhibits PMLs from aggregating at the wound site and causing tissue necrosis, can reduce disfiguring ugly scars; data is limited
    • But dapsone isn’t all that either – can cause hemolysis, methemoglobinemia (G6PD def)
  • Hyperbarics:  Maynor et al showed that 48 hrs of HBO caused a 50% reduction in lesion size after experimental envenomation; possibly may cause reoxygenation of the wound and sequestration of PMLs away wound.; not approved by the US Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society as of yet.

 

Other Spiders Causing Necrosis:

  • Hobo Spiders (Tegenaria Agrestis)
  • Yellow Sac Spiders (cheiracanthium species)
  • Wolf spiders (lycosidae family)

 

References:

  • Brown recluse spider  From:  Habif: Clinical Dermatology, 5th ed.; Chapter 15 – Infestations and Bites >> SPIDERS BROWN RECLUSE SPIDER (GENUS LOXOSCELES)
  • Shannon: Haddad and Winchester’s Clinical Management of Poisoning and Drug Overdose, 4th ed.; Chapter 22 – Venomous Arthropods >> Spiders
  • Bites of Brown Recluse Spiders and Suspected Necrotic Arachnidism, N Engl J Med 2005;352:700-7.

 

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Jay Khadpe MD

  • Editor in Chief of "The Original Kings of County"
  • Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine
  • Assistant Residency Director
  • SUNY Downstate / Kings County Hospital

Latest posts by Jay Khadpe MD (see all)


Jay Khadpe MD

  • Editor in Chief of “The Original Kings of County”
  • Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine
  • Assistant Residency Director
  • SUNY Downstate / Kings County Hospital

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