I feel like some of you should ask your vet, but luckily I’m here to help.
A lot snake bites have to do with the type of snake, location of bite, and amount of venom injected. In decreasing order for North America from most severe to least: Rattlesnakes of varying varieties but generally Eastern/Western are top, coral snakes (but they’re kinda odd and Uber regional, moccasins/cottonmouth, then copperheads. Again this is general.
Location is next: Face/neck or around any mucous membranes (think inside of mouth/lips and around the nose) are the worst, with extremities being the least.
Dose is the biggest component. Younger snakes tend to inject more, but regardless of age, you’re not going to be able to readily predict or know how much. You generally just treat based on snake type, location of bite, and amount of tissue swelling.
Realistically, Benadryl doesn’t do much because the swelling isn’t from severe histamine release, it’s from factors in the venom that cause tissue necrosis. Benadryl doesn’t hurt to give. It’s more of a “doing something to do something” type treatment. It’s not wrong to give and it gives everyone a peace of mind. It will at least calm the dog down. Real Benadryl dose is 4 mg/kg. You guys can calculate that yourselves. Can’t give all the trade secrets away. Antibiotics are only used in most instances if there is already tissue necrosis occurring.
The Crotalid Vaccine is worth it if high risk factors involved. Geography, work type, etc. It’s not going to prevent a reaction, it’s going to reduce the severity. Antivenin is always a good idea, but definitely needed for those sever facial/neck bites.
Y’all each owe me $10 a piece
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