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This article is for Medical Professionals

Professional Reference articles are designed for health professionals to use. They are written by UK doctors and based on research evidence, UK and European Guidelines. You may find the Insect Bites and Stings article more useful, or one of our other health articles.

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Treatment of almost all medical conditions has been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. NICE has issued rapid update guidelines in relation to many of these. This guidance is changing frequently. Please visit https://www.nice.org.uk/covid-19 to see if there is temporary guidance issued by NICE in relation to the management of this condition, which may vary from the information given below.

There are over 34,000 species of spider worldwide (except Antarctica). Almost all are fanged and venomous; however, fewer than 0.5% are able to bite through human skin and, of these, only a handful are considered dangerous. Most spiders are shy and not naturally aggressive, with most bites occurring when the spider is provoked or trapped. In the UK the chance of a significant spider bite is very low; however, risk can increase with:

  • Travelling overseas.[2]
  • Keeping an exotic pet spider.
  • Handling fruit shipments.

The vast majority of spider bites, despite the myths and hype, are not medically significant. The few that are, give rise to neurotoxic or necrotic arachnidism envenomation toxidromes described below.

  • Widow spiders (Latrodectus spp.), including the American black widow (L. mactans), and the Australian redback (L. hasselti) - these have distinctly marked abdomens with red/orange dorsal stripe and ventral hourglass patterns.
    REDBACK (1)
    Image 1. Redback Spider - Image © Dr A M Bonsall - Used with Permission
    REDBACK (2)
    Image 2. Redback Spider - Image © Dr A M Bonsall - Used with Permission

  • Funnel-web spiders of Australia - the Sydney funnel-web (Atrax robustus); mouse spiders and relatives - fairly large, black and aggressive.
  • Necrotising arachnids - includes the American brown recluse (Loxosceles reclusa), South American brown spider (L. laeta) - these have a violin pattern on their backs. Others have been accused, including the black window or house spider (Badumna spp.).

    BLACK HOUSE WINDOW SPIDER
    Image 3. Black House/Window Spider - Image © Dr A M Bonsall - Used with Permission

  • The South American armed, banana or wandering spider (Phoneutria nigriventer, P. fera and other spp.).
  • Other large spiders such as the Huntsman spiders (Sparassidae spp., formerly Heteropodidae spp.) or the many varied orb weavers may look fearsome but are generally timid and not venomous to humans.
    HUNTSMAN
    Image 4. Huntsman Spider - Image © Dr A M Bonsall - Used with Permission
    GOLDEN ORB WEAVING SPIDER
    Image 5. Golden Orb Weaving Spider - Image © Dr A M Bonsall - Used with Permission
  • Local pain, swelling and pruritus.
  • Nausea, vomiting, sweating and dizziness may sometimes occur.
  • Severe allergic reactions are rare but potentially life-threatening.
  • Instead of biting, tarantulas can also defend themselves by flicking fine barbed abdominal hairs using their legs. These can cause significant irritation of the eyes, skin and respiratory tract.
  • Even with the most venomous spiders, often more than 80% of the bites may be 'dry' or with insufficient venom for systemic envenomation.

The most important include the widow spiders, funnel-web spiders and Phoneutria spp.

Widow spiders, some Steatoda ('false widow') species

The widow neurotoxin, active against vertebrates, opens cation channels (including calcium channels) presynaptically, causing increased release and then depletion of multiple neurotransmitters affecting somatic and autonomic nerves.

Brown house, or false widow, spiders - Steatoda grossa in Australia and Steatoda nobilis in the UK, have caused mild neurotoxic arachnidism and, in the case of the former, have been treated successfully with redback antivenom.

  • A characteristic feature is pain. Initially the bite can go unnoticed or be perceived as a sharp pinprick. The pain can be local or spread proximally from a bite on the limb to the torso, causing chest or abdominal pain.
  • Nonspecific systemic features (nausea, vomiting, headache, lethargy and malaise).
  • Local and regional diaphoresis and, less commonly, other autonomic and neurological effects.
  • The facies latrodectismica from a widow bite is a painful grimace caused by facial spasm and trismus associated with swollen eyelids, congested conjunctivae, flushing and sweating.
  • Full latrodectism may also include tachycardia, hypertension, irritability, psychosis, priapism, acute kidney injury, respiratory compromise and cardiac failure.
  • If a spider bite is not considered, the diagnosis may be missed, especially in younger patients where communication is limited.

Funnel-web and related spiders

Primates are particularly sensitive to funnel-web venom. It contains a distinctive peptide with hyaluronidase and other components and causes rapid massive release of neurotransmitters at autonomic and neuromuscular junctions.

  • The bite is usually immediately painful from larger fangs and acidic venom.
  • There are rapid systemic signs: vomiting, agitation, headache.
  • Autonomic hyper-reactivity (tachycardia, hypertension, sweating, piloerection).
  • Muscle twitching, tongue fasciculation, oral paraesthesiae.
  • Pulmonary oedema, hypotension and coma can ensue.
  • The Australian mouse spider (Missulena occatoria) may have a similar venom to the funnel-web spider but currently only a few serious envenomations have been reported.

Phoneutria spiders

The venom is a complex mixture of amino acids, hyaluronidase, serotonin and other kallikrein-kinin activating factors that stimulate peripheral and central nervous system neurons.

  • The bite is very painful.
  • Localised sweating and piloerection appears at the bite site, with pain radiating up the bitten extremity to the trunk.
  • Following this, tachycardia, hypertension, profuse diaphoresis, hypothermia, salivation, nausea, vomiting, vertigo, visual disturbances, priapism (especially in young boys) and (rarely) death.

This should probably be called loxoscelism as only Loxosceles spp. have good evidence for causing ulcers.[3] There are a number of enzymes that may be involved in the necrotic process; sphingomyelinase D appears to be critical.[4] Other spiders have gained notoriety for causing dermonecrosis (eg, hobo spiders (Tegenaria agrestis), white-tailed spider (Lampona cylindrata), wolf spider (Lycosa spp.), the yellow sac spiders (Cheiracanthium spp., and black window or house spider) but the anecdotal reports of necrotic bites with these spiders often do not stand up to scrutiny and evidence is generally lacking. It must be remembered that any spider bite has the potential to become infected and that may lead to secondary necrosis.

With regard to the brown recluse spider:

  • The bite site burns, swells.
  • A characteristic macular erythematous halo lesion develops.
  • This either resolves over a few days or becomes purple and then a dark eschar that sloughs off over week, sometimes leaving a necrotic ulcer that can be recurrent and slow to heal.
  • More rarely, a systemic loxoscelism can give rise to fever, morbilliform rash, jaundice, intravascular haemolysis associated with spherocytosis, haemoglobinuria/acute kidney injury, seizures and, uncommonly, disseminated intravascular coagulopathy (DIC).

First aid treatment

  • Funnel-web and other rapidly acting venoms: pressure immobilisation bandaging and splinting of the bitten limb may delay venom spread.
  • Widow and brown recluse: ice-pack.
  • Reassure the patient. If possible, take the spider (dead or alive) to hospital for identification.

Supportive treatment

  • Analgesia (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, opioids) as required, tetanus prophylaxis, and local wound care.
  • Antihistamines, anti-emetics and (rarely) benzodiazepines, beta-blockers or atropine may also be useful for more significant local and systemic symptoms.
  • Antibiotics are not advocated unless there is evidence of secondary infection.

Specific treatment

  • Antivenom (side-effects include anaphylaxis and serum sickness) is available in some countries for widow, funnel-web, Loxosceles and Phoneutria spp. bites.[5]
  • Neurotoxic arachnidism seems more responsive to antivenom than does the necrotic type.
  • Redback antivenom can be given several days after the bite but the evidence that it produces consistent benefit is poor.
  • Many therapies for necrotic lesions have been advocated but there is little clear evidence of their effectiveness and spider bites are often incorrectly asumed to be the cause of necrotic ulcers.[6]
  • Antivenom has dramatically cut mortality and almost no deaths now occur where it is readily available.
  • Accurate data on the morbidity and mortality are difficult to find, as spider bites are not a reportable condition in most countries and simple tests to determine envenomation are not available.
  • Most fatalities are in children and the elderly and are likely to be related to the faster-acting neurotoxic venoms.
  • Funnel-web fatalities (all before introduction of antivenom in 1982) died between 15 minutes to 6 days after the envenomation.

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Further reading and references

  1. Vetter RS, Isbister GK; Medical aspects of spider bites. Annu Rev Entomol. 200853:409-29.

  2. Ni Chroinin D, Cummins F, O'Connor P; Australian immigrant of the arachnid variety? Eur J Emerg Med. 2009 Jun16(3):159-62.

  3. Isbister GK; Necrotic arachnidism: the mythology of a modern plague. Lancet. 2004 Aug 7-13364(9433):549-53.

  4. Swanson DL, Vetter RS; Loxoscelism. Clin Dermatol. 2006 May-Jun24(3):213-21.

  5. Hoyte CO, Cushing TA, Heard KJ; Anaphylaxis to black widow spider antivenom. Am J Emerg Med. 2012 Jun30(5):836.e1-2. doi: 10.1016/j.ajem.2011.03.017.

  6. Isbister GK, Whyte IM; Suspected white-tail spider bite and necrotic ulcers. Intern Med J. 2004 Jan-Feb34(1-2):38-44.

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