Antivenin in a sentence as a noun

> I'm curious... why is it that so much antivenin was required?

I'm curious... why is it that so much antivenin was required?

>but the whole "you might get the wrong antivenin" disaster scenario is a reach.

Nobody has died from a funnel web since the antivenin was introduced many years ago.

This article is mistakenly using this word to refer to antivenin.

They have a 24 hour hotline and will arrange to have antivenin immediately flown to anywhere in the world.

Two examples that come to my mind would be acetaminophen and coral snake antivenin.

These two Australian dudes are awful, no doubt, but the whole "you might get the wrong antivenin" disaster scenario is a reach.

The only particularly deadly spider lives only around Sydney, you have to go hunting for it, and there's antivenin for it.

It appears that anyone who could quickly provide the Mexican variant of the coral snake antivenin would be in a position to profit.

Furthermore, anaphylaxis is a common problem with many kinds of antivenin and other vaccines.

I can't avoid to think that, at least in the case they use to illustrate the problem at the start of the article, the problem would be solved with boots, not with expensive antivenin.

As far as antivenins, it is my understanding that most hospitals don't keep them on hand for the most part, and instead rely on an "antivenin bank" to fly it in when needed.

"Africa has an antivenin supply problem, and all we have to do to fix it is modernize, educate, and politically stabilize those countries.

Under this limitation, scorpions are mailable only when sent for the purposes of medical research use or the manufacture of antivenin.

Genetic engineering approaches, once R&D is done, probably scale better than the traditional way of producing antivenin.

It should surprise no one that in much of Africa there are economic and sociopolitical challenges involved in supplying antivenin.

Focus less on advanced gene-splicing antivenin R&D, and more on traditional antivenin production, because Africa has unmet demand.

Hopefully the government or some public interest organization will fund further production of the antivenin, its unfortunate that antivenin is not more durable.

Genetic engineering approaches, which don't rely on purification of antibodies from animal blood, lead to fewer, and perhaps not any, extraneous proteins in the antivenin.

Antivenin definitions

noun

an antitoxin that counteracts the effects of venom from the bite of a snake or insect or other animal

See also: antivenene