Aster CMI doctors help 5-year-old recover from coma, paralysis and poisoning caused by deadly snake bite. The bite was caused by one of country’s five most poisonous snakes, the common Krait.
Nischit, who hails from a rural village in Adichunchanagiri a place near Hassan in Karnataka was bitten by a common Krait snake on his toe when he had accidentally stepped on it while opening the door of his house late evening. Having identified the snake and knowing its potent venom, his family rushed him to the nearby hospital. The child already had significant exposure to the poisonand was slipping into a coma. The local doctors then informed the family that they may not be able to ensure the child’s survival. Devastated by this news, the family decided to shift the child to Aster CMI Hospital with respiratory support through a 2 hour Ambulance journey. On presentation to the Pediatric Emergency room at Aster, child was completely paralysed with no respiratory efforts and unstable blood pressure. He was admitted to the Children’s ICU on life support.
Nischit was administered anti-snake venom and medicines to reverse the paralysis. Krait is one of the most deadly Neuroparalytic snakes whose venom damages the nerve endings and the neuromuscular junction resulting in prolonged paralysis and locked in syndrome. He was on long term Ventilatory support and underwent Tracheostomy – anartificial tube surgically pinned to his windpipe in order to allow proper breathing. The child slowly regained consciousness after 7 days and started showing flicker of movement in the distal muscle groups of hands and feet. He eventually broke out of his paralysis but the recovery of breathing muscles took another 2 weeks.
The family still had a pending balance of 4 lakhs to pay, apart from the new expenses that were to follow. This is when Aster CMI hospital in collaboration with a crowd-funding platform came forward to raise the additional funds for Nistchit’s treatment and played a vital role in saving his life. After staying for close to 20 days in PICU and with further medication, the child started responding to the treatment and by the third week was taken off from the ventilator and was able to stand and walk.
Explaining about the treatment of the child and the complexity of the case, Dr. ChetanGinigeri, Consultant, Paediatrics and Paediatrics Intensive Care Unit, Aster CMI Hospital, said: “As he is a young child, the venom transfer and fast heartbeat causes rapid spread of venom. Children bitten by Kraits manifest with breathlessness and respiratory paralysis very fast. By the time child presented to us – he was very sick, was in coma with complete paralysis. He required complete respiratory and other organ support along with nutritional rehabilitation to allow a very slow yet complete recovery. Multiple teams including Pediatric ICU, respiratory
Thanking the doctors for saving the life of their son, Mr. Manjunath, Nischit’s father said: He is our only child and is our everything. Every morning he wakes up with me at 7, and run errands with us at our small tuck-shop. He is full of energy and aims to become a doctor one day. I am thankful to Aster CMI doctors who helped us mobilize the funds through crowdfunding and gave a new lease of life to my son. Without their help and support, our child would not have lived to see another day.”