Hot-Water Immersion (HWI) or Ice-Pack Treatment (IPT) as First Aid for Human Envenomation by Marine Animals? Review of Literature
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Jellyfish are divided into three main classes, Scyphozoa, Hydrozoa, and Cubozoa, with Cubozoa being the most dangerous [26]. Jellyfish are equipped with nematocysts in their tentacles, which inject venom, causing pain, swelling, burning, itching, and activates receptors in nociceptive neurones. Cnidocysts are structures found in Cnidaria, traditionally divided into three categories: nematocyst, spirocyst, and ptychocyst [19]. Nematocysts, the most diverse, serve defensive and predatory functions. Spirocysts immobilise prey in anthozoans, while Ceriantharia uses ptychocysts to create protective tubes. Contact with the skin of jellyfish triggers the immediate release of cnidocysts, capable of penetrating human skin and delivering toxic venom.
- The Scorpaenidae family includes several fish species, such as scorpionfish (Scorpaeninae), lionfish (Pteroinae), and stonefish (Synanceinae). Among these, the venom of the stonefish is the most toxic [27]. Stonefish inhabit the shallow waters of the Indo-Pacific region. Each stonefish has 13 dorsal spines, and each spine is connected to a pair of poisonous glands. Stonefish venom contains a powerful membrane-damaging, heat-labile toxin, capable of releasing the substance P and cyclooxygenase, which causes swelling and severe pain. Despite this, in some parts of Asia, such as Hong Kong, stonefish is considered a delicacy [28].
- Weever fish belongs to the Trachinidae family. They possess venomous dorsal spines that cause stinging injuries when stepped on, making them a hazard in sandy and muddy seabed areas along the Mediterranean and European coasts, especially during the summer season [29].
- Stingrays, a subgroup of cartilaginous fish, are part of the Chondrichthyes class. Stingrays have flattened bodies with pectoral fins fused to their heads. The mouth is located on the ventral side. The most dangerous part of a stingray is its tail, which contains a one- to four-spine stinger [30,31].
- Sea anemones, part of the order Actiniaria, are highly diverse marine creatures found at various depths and latitudes divided into two suborders, Anenthemonae and Enthemonae [32]. Sea anemones use venomous stings to catch prey and defend themselves. Although most species pose little threat to humans, some have highly toxic venoms that can be dangerous [11]. Although envenomation caused by sea anemones is not frequent and severe, they constitute a unique example worthy of consideration in this work.
2. Results
2.1. Hot-Water Immersion as First Aid for Human Envenomation Caused by Marine Animals
2.1.1. Jellyfish
2.1.2. Stonefish
2.1.3. Lesser Weeverfish
2.1.4. Stingray
2.1.5. Lionfish
2.1.6. Scorpionfish
2.1.7. Catfish
2.1.8. Unspecified/Several Organisms
2.2. Ice Packs as First Aid for Human Envenomation Caused by Marine Animals
2.2.1. Jellyfish
2.2.2. Hydroids
2.2.3. Sea Anemones
3. Discussion
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Literature Search Methods
4.2. Data Presentation
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Jellyfish | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Reference | Research Type | Species | Region | Examined Factor | Findings |
[22] | Review | Unspecified | Unspecified | Evidence for the use of heat or ice in the treatment of cnidarian envenomations, with the aim of defining which one is more effective | Most studies endorse the use of HWI for pain relief in cnidarian envenomation |
[33] | Systematic review | Unspecified | North America and Hawaii | Pain relief after treatment with hot water, vinegar, papain | Hot water exhibited the most significant analgesic effect among the analysed methods |
[34] | In vivo and ex vivo studies | Cyanea capillata | For in vitro tentacles of C. capillata were collected from Puget Sound. For ex vivo, live C. capillata, were collected from Dublin Bay | Several methods of first aid protocols in case of C. capillata envenomation | The best first aid for C. capillata is rinsing with vinegar or Sting No More® commercial product and 40-min-long treatment with HWI (45 °C) |
[35] | Review | Unspecified | Singapore | The article contains appropriate steps to take in the event of a jellyfish sting | HWI is recommended for pain relief in jellyfish stung case |
[36] | Randomised controlled trial | Carybdea alata | Honolulu, Hawaii | Pain perception (VAS scale) after treatment of HWI, papain or vinegar | In 92% of cases, the lowest VAS score for heat was lower than for either papain or vinegar |
[37] | Uncontrolled trial | Carybdea sp. | Australia | Pain perception after different treatments (ice, vinegar, aluminium sulfate, and hot water at 45 °C) | Hot water proved to the best at pain reduction and its recurrence |
[38] | Randomised controlled trial | Carybdea alata | Waikiki, Hawaii | Pain relief after treatment with cold and hot compresses | Hot packs treatment provided with approximately 5 times higher chance of pain cessation within 15 min, than control group |
[39] | Clinical trial | Cyanea capillata | Gothenburg, Sweden | Comparison of pain relief between HWI and topical corticosteroid assessed on a Numeric Rating Scale (0–10) | HWI is more effective for treating acute pain than cortisone up to 6 h after treatment |
[40] | Randomised controlled trial | Physalia physalis | Australia | Pain perception (VAS scale) after HWI and cold pack treatment | At the 20-min mark, 87% of the hot water group displayed clinically reduced pain compared to 33% treated with ice packs |
[41] | Case study | Carukia barnesi Chironex fleckeri | Australia | Pain relief | Neither individual required additional pain relief medication after HWI |
[42] | Retrospective review | Unspecified | Western O’ahu, Hawaii | Pain relief | The effectiveness of a heat treatment in reducing pain in cnidarian envenomation was higher compared to the use of painkillers or benzodiazepines |
[43] | Case study | Unspecified | Coastal arena of Southern Italy | Various treatment | Hot and cold water along with ice packs were utilised, although not so frequently |
Stonefish | |||||
Reference | Research Type | Species | Region | Examined Factor | Findings |
[28] | Case report | Stonefish (Synanceja horrida) | Hong Kong, China | Pain relief, and treatment of potential bacterial growth and further necrotizing fasciitis development | Hot water may accelerate bacterial growth and necrotizing fasciitis. Therefore, antibiotics should be administered |
[44] | Experimental in vitro studies | Stonefish (Synanceia horrida) | Venom collected from James Cook University, Cairns, Queensland, Australia | Cytotoxicity of S. horrida venom on human cardiomyocyte cell line at various temperature and incubation times | Incubation period of 20 min at 42 °C is optimal for treating stonefish wounds |
[45] | Case series report | Stonefish (Synanceia sp.) | Singapore, Myammar, China | Pain relief | In 7 of 8 cases HWI was used to reduce pain. Presumably due to HWI patients staying less time in hospital |
[46] | Case report | Stonefish (Synanceja horrida) | Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia | Pain relief after HWI conducted after diclofenac and morphine treatment | Pain reduced in scale from 8/10 to 1/10. No further treatment was required after HWI treatment |
Little Weeverfish | |||||
Reference | Research Type | Species | Region | Examined Factor | Findings |
[29] | Case study | Lesser weever fish (Echiichthys vipera) | Mediterranean and European coastal areas | Risk of burn after HWI treatment | Thermal burn can occur after HWI treatment |
[47] | Review | Lesser weever fish (Echiichthys vipera) | Coastline of the UK | Pain management | HWI is considered the most effective marine envenomation treatment |
Stingray | |||||
Reference | Research Type | Species | Region | Examined Factor | Findings |
[48] | Retrospective review | Unspecified | California, USA | Pain relief after HWI or medicaments | Out of 74 patients, who exclusively underwent HWI, 65 achieved pain relief without requiring supplementary therapy |
[49] | Observational Study | Unspecified | California, USA | Pain relief, Ongoing symptoms or complications | HWI presumably is more effective than HWI/povidone-iodine |
Lionfish | |||||
Reference | Research Type | Species | Region | Examined Factor | Findings |
[50] | Case series report | Pterois volitans | French West Indies | Pain duration and intensity reduction | Immersing the stung limb in hot water can decrease the duration of pain and mitigate potential complications |
[51] | Case reports | Pterois volitans | Poland | Treatment methods encompassed hot water immersion, wound cleaning, antibiotic administration, and tetanus prevention | HWI is method utilised by toxicology facilities |
Scorpionfish | |||||
Reference | Research Type | Species | Region | Examined Factor | Findings |
[52] | Case studies | Scorpaena plumieri Bloch, 1789 and Scorpaena brasiliensis Cuvier, 1829 | Brazil | Pain relief | Six patients found pain relief through hot-water immersion. Other methods like systemic painkillers, applying urine, alcohol, and garlic were largely ineffective for pain relief |
Catfish | |||||
Reference | Research Type | Species | Region | Examined Factor | Findings |
[3] | Case studies | suborder siluroidei | Western Atlantic Ocean coast | Pain relief | Immersion of affected extremities in hot water was utilised in 20% of patients and was proved beneficial |
[23] | Case studies | Clarias gariepinus (Burchell, 1822) and Heteropneustes fossilis (Bloch, 1794) | Poland | Pain relief | HWI was utilised as pain control treatment |
[53] | Case study | Heteropneustes fossilis (Bloch, 1794) | Poland | Pain relief | The wound was treated with lidocaine, material removal, and thorough cleansing. The affected hand was immersed in hot water (45 °C) for about 45 min to inactivate venom |
[54] | Case study | Unspecified | Iran | Pain relief | Treatment involved immersing the affected limbs in hot water (temperature below 50 °C), which relieved pain within 30 min |
Unspecified/Several Organisms | |||||
References | Research Type | Species | Region | Examined Factor | Findings |
[21] | Review | Marine venomous species (jellyfish, stingray, weeverfish, lionfish, scorpionfish, stonefish etc.) | Unspecified | Pain relief | Employing the highest temperature that the patient can safely endure is optimal |
[55] | First part: Retrospective review—phone survey Second part: experimental in vitro studies | Unspecified | Hong Kong, China | Practical solution for the loss of water temperature in the container during HWI | Authors proposed overall recommendations for HWI therapy |
[56] | Review | Marine species endemic to the Mediterranean Sea | Mediterranean Sea | Pain relief | Authors recommend HWI at a temperature not exceeding 45 °C for a duration of up to 2 h or until the pain diminishes |
[57] | Cross-sectional descriptive study | Pterois sp., Echinoidea, Ariidae, Chondrichthyes, Elapidae | Australia | Pain relief | In 56.3% cases HWI reduced pain effectively |
Jellyfish | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Reference | Research Type | Species | Region | Examined Factor | Findings |
[12] | Review | Physalia sp., Carybdea alata, Carukia barnes, Chironex fleckeri, Chiropsalmus quadrigatus, Chiroplasmus quadrumanus, Pelagia noctiluca, Cyanea capillata | Unspecified | Hot water or ice packs | Appropriate envenomation treatment depends on species that caused it |
[24] | In vitro, ex vivo | Alatina alata and Chironex flecker | C. fleckeri was collected from Queensland, Australia, meanwhile A. alata from Hawaii, USA | Usage of commonly recommended and commercially available methods | Application of ice increased A. alata sting severity, while heat was notably effective in reducing hemolytic area for C. fleckeri |
[58] | Review | Unspecified | Unspecified | Iced seawater or cold packs | Usage of cold water/ice packs demonstrates a potent pain-relieving effect |
[59] | Review | Physalia physalis, Cyanea capillata, Chironex fleckeri | Unspecified | Cold and warm water | Warm water is beneficial for bites that do not involve toxins that can be neutralised with heat. Cold water, however, may be more appropriate for severe systemic reactions and reduce pain |
[60] | Prospective cohort study | Chironex fleckeri | Australia | Vinegar, ice packs and painkillers | Pain of patients could be controlled with vinegar followed by ice treatment |
[61] | Randomised controlled trial | Chironex fleckeri | Australia | Ice packs and HWI | There was no statistically significant difference between the results of the two treatments |
[62] | Retrospective study | Unspecified | Eastern Mediterranean Sea | Various treatment, including ice | Out of 31 patients treated with ice, 21 showed improvement with this treatment. |
Hydroids | |||||
Reference | Research Type | Species | Region | Examined Factor | Findings |
[63] | In vitro studies | Lytocarpus philippinus | Australia | Methylated spirits, vinegar, urine, sea water, fresh water, distilled water, aloe vera and ‘Stingnose’ | Methylated spirits induced discharge in mature mastigophores of the hydroid. Unlike vinegar, it activated nematocysts. Therefore, water dousing followed by ice application is advised for pain relief, consistent with first aid for non-cubozoan jellyfish stings. |
Sea Anemones | |||||
Research Type | Species | Region | Examined Factor | Findings | |
[19] | Case study | Anemonia viridis | Catalonia, Spain | Seawater, vinegar, ammonia, 10% baking soda mixed in seawater, freshwater | Seawater does not trigger cnidocyst activation, making it a neutral rinse solution. Vinegar and ammonia induce significant discharge, while a 10% baking soda solution causes medium discharge. Freshwater leads to low discharge, often leaving undischarged cnidocytes. |
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Niżnik, Ł.; Jabłońska, K.; Orczyk, M.; Orzechowska, M.; Jasińska, J.; Smoliniec, B.; Hućko, A.; Kosowicz, P.; Klocek, A.; Słoma, P.; et al. Hot-Water Immersion (HWI) or Ice-Pack Treatment (IPT) as First Aid for Human Envenomation by Marine Animals? Review of Literature. Toxins 2024, 16, 273. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins16060273
Niżnik Ł, Jabłońska K, Orczyk M, Orzechowska M, Jasińska J, Smoliniec B, Hućko A, Kosowicz P, Klocek A, Słoma P, et al. Hot-Water Immersion (HWI) or Ice-Pack Treatment (IPT) as First Aid for Human Envenomation by Marine Animals? Review of Literature. Toxins. 2024; 16(6):273. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins16060273
Chicago/Turabian StyleNiżnik, Łukasz, Karolina Jabłońska, Michał Orczyk, Martyna Orzechowska, Judyta Jasińska, Barbara Smoliniec, Agnieszka Hućko, Piotr Kosowicz, Anna Klocek, Paweł Słoma, and et al. 2024. "Hot-Water Immersion (HWI) or Ice-Pack Treatment (IPT) as First Aid for Human Envenomation by Marine Animals? Review of Literature" Toxins 16, no. 6: 273. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins16060273
APA StyleNiżnik, Ł., Jabłońska, K., Orczyk, M., Orzechowska, M., Jasińska, J., Smoliniec, B., Hućko, A., Kosowicz, P., Klocek, A., Słoma, P., Roztoczyńska, A., Toporowska-Kaźmierak, J., & Jurowski, K. (2024). Hot-Water Immersion (HWI) or Ice-Pack Treatment (IPT) as First Aid for Human Envenomation by Marine Animals? Review of Literature. Toxins, 16(6), 273. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins16060273